Enhanced ldacs system having different user classes and associated methods

ABSTRACT

An enhanced L-band Digital Aeronautical Communications System (LDACS) may include LDACS ground stations; and a LDACS airborne stations, each configured to communicate with the LDACS ground stations at a given class of service from among different classes of service. The enhanced LDACS may also include a network controller configured to operate the LDACS ground stations and LDACS airborne stations at the different user classes of service.

PRIORITY APPLICATION(S)

This application is based upon U.S. provisional patent application Ser.No. 63/050,131 filed Jul. 10, 2020, the disclosure which is herebyincorporated by reference in its entirety.

FIELD OF THE INVENTION

This invention relates to communications, and more particularly, to theL-band Digital Aeronautical Communications System (LDACS).

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

LDACS stands for the L-band Digital Aeronautical Communications System.It is an upcoming air-to-ground communications standard, and therefore,an important data link technology within the future communicationsinfrastructure for aviation. Standardization within the ICAO(International Civil Aviation Organization) started in December 2016 andthe LDACS draft SARPs (Standards and Recommended Practices) weredeveloped and endorsed in October 2018. The LDACS system leverages theLDACS waveform as a new Command and Control/Command, Control andCommunication (C2/C3) process with aircraft and provides user planeservices over an LDACS connection.

The ICAO standardization effort for LDACS has so far yielded a basicMedia Access Controller (MAC) and physical-layer (PHY) definition thatprovides for communications fundamentals such as radio link attachmentand connection establishment. However, improvements can be made toprovide a higher-layer architecture and procedures to support moreadvanced communications features, including voice and data, AlternativePosition and Timing (A-PNT) services, enhanced security, unmanned aerialsystems (UAS), channel aggregation, and other applications.

SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION

In general, an enhanced L-band Digital Aeronautical CommunicationsSystem (LDACS) may comprise a plurality of LDACS ground stations; and aplurality of LDACS airborne stations, each configured to communicatewith the LDACS ground stations at a given class of service from among aplurality of different classes of service. The enhanced LDACS may alsocomprise a network controller configured to operate the plurality ofLDACS ground stations and LDACS airborne stations at the plurality thedifferent user classes of service.

The network controller may be configured to reassign at least onechannel to maintain a given user class of service during flight. Thenetwork controller may also be configured to maintain different userclasses of service to provide priority communication to a higher userclass and to preempt communication to a lower user class when resourcesare limited.

For example, the plurality of different user classes of service maycomprise at least two of an emergency user class of service, a militaryuser class of service, a commercial user class of service, and a civiluser class of service. In some embodiments, each LDACS airborne stationmay be configured to prioritize onboard data communications services.The onboard data communications services may comprise at least two ofcockpit voice data, pilot data link communications data, A-PNT data,ADS-B data, passenger data, telemetry data, and operational data.

Each of the plurality of LDACS ground stations may comprise a groundantenna, a ground radio frequency (RF) transceiver coupled to the groundantenna, and a ground controller coupled to the ground RF transceiver.Each of the plurality of LDACS airborne stations may comprise anairborne antenna, an airborne radio frequency (RF) transceiver coupledto the airborne antenna, and an airborne controller coupled to theairborne RF transceiver.

The plurality of LDACS ground stations and LDACS airborne stations maybe configured to operate within at least one 500 kHz channel in afrequency range of between 964-1156 MHz. In some embodiments, thenetwork controller may comprise a Cloud-based network controller. Inother embodiments, the network controller may comprise a distributednetwork controller. In addition, at least one of the LDACS airbornestations may comprise an unmanned LDACS airborne station.

The network controller may comprise a processor and an associatedmemory. Another aspect is directed to a method operating an enhancedL-band Digital Aeronautical Communications System (LDACS) comprising aplurality of LDACS ground stations; and a plurality of LDACS airbornestations, each configured to communicate with the LDACS ground stationsat a given class of service from among a plurality of different classesof service. The method may comprise operating a network controller tooperate the plurality of LDACS ground stations and LDACS airbornestations at the plurality the different user classes of service.

DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

Other objects, features and advantages of the present invention willbecome apparent from the detailed description of the invention, whichfollows when considered in light of the accompanying drawings in which:

FIG. 1 is a chart showing the Aeronautical Radio Navigation Services inthe 960-1215 MHz frequency band and which incorporates the enhancedLDACS system.

FIG. 2 is a map of the continental US (CONUS) showing deployment of DMEand TACAN sites.

FIG. 3 is a timeline for the LDACS standardization.

FIG. 4 is a graph showing the signal interlacing between DME and LDACSOFDM (Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexing) channels.

FIG. 5 is a schematic view showing an example of interference betweenLDACS and DME/TACAN in a deployment at one site for the LDACS andDME/TACAN having a single ground station.

FIG. 6 is another schematic view showing an example of interferencebetween LDACS and DME/TACAN in a non-cosite deployment having two groundstations.

FIG. 7 is a state diagram showing the aircraft station MAC state for anLDACS system.

FIG. 8 is a state diagram showing reacquisition with the OPEN orenhanced state.

FIG. 9 is a messaging flow diagram for LDACS handover Type I used in theenhanced LDACS system.

FIG. 10 is a state diagram for the LDACS handover Type I shown in FIG.9.

FIG. 11 is a messaging flow diagram for the LDACS handover Type II usedin the enhanced LDACS system.

FIG. 12 is a state diagram for the LDACS handover Type II of FIG. 11.

FIG. 13 is a state diagram for the Idle state for mobility messagingused in the enhanced LDACS system.

FIG. 14 is a diagram showing the enhanced LDACS system cell layout andshowing the LDACS underlay and overlay.

FIG. 15 is a diagram of a protocol stack for the enhanced LDACS system.

FIG. 16 is a diagram showing the IP flow through the enhanced LDACSsystem.

FIG. 17 is a diagram showing the quality of service impact for theenhanced LDACS system.

FIG. 18 is a diagram showing quality of service functions.

FIG. 19 is a chart of a QCI example for the enhanced LDACS system.

FIG. 20 is an example of an LTE QOS.

FIG. 21 is a schematic representation of possible LDACS channellocations in the enhanced LDACS system for examples of contiguous andnon-contiguous bands used in channel aggregation.

FIG. 22 is a chart showing four different schematic block diagrams ofpossible transmitter architectures for the three aggregation scenariosshown in FIG. 21.

FIG. 23 is a graph showing the guard band, data symbols, DC subcarrier,and pilot symbols in the LDACS forward link signal.

FIG. 24 is a diagram showing the structure of the LDACS forward linksignal frame.

FIG. 25 is a graph and table taken from the LDACS specification for theLDACS ground transmitter spectral mass.

FIG. 26 is a graph showing the LDACS channel mask.

FIG. 27 is a diagram showing occupied adjacent first and secondchannels.

FIG. 28 is a graph showing adjacent channel interference.

FIG. 29 is a graph showing another example of adjacent channelinterference.

FIG. 30 is a graph showing an example of a 1.5 MHz expanded channel.

FIG. 31 is a map of the southeastern United States showing a nominalfrequency plan design with three air-to-ground and three ground-to-airLDACS channels per cell.

FIG. 32 is a map of the CONUS showing the number of free LDACS channelsfor dynamic assignment when adjacent channel assignment between theLDACS and DME/TACAN not allowed.

FIG. 33 is a histogram showing the free LDACS channels for dynamicassignment.

FIG. 34 is a graph showing the number of free channels corresponding tothe histogram of FIG. 33.

FIG. 35 is another map of the CONUS showing the number of free LDACSchannels for dynamic assignment where adjacent channel assignment isallowed between the LDACS and DME/TACAN.

FIG. 36 is a histogram of the free LDACS channels for dynamic assignmentcorresponding to that shown in the map of FIG. 35.

FIG. 37 is a graph showing the number of free channels corresponding tothat of FIG. 36.

FIG. 38 is a map of the CONUS showing the maximum achievable data ratewhen all free channels are aggregated and adjacent channel assignmentbetween LDACS and DME/TACAN is not allowed.

FIG. 39 is a histogram of the maximum achievable data rate when all freechannels are aggregated corresponding to the CONUS of FIG. 38.

FIG. 40 is a graph of the achievable data rate corresponding to FIG. 39.

FIG. 41 is a map of the CONUS showing the maximum achievable data ratewhen all free channels are aggregated and adjacent channel assignmentbetween LDACS and DME/TACAN is allowed.

FIG. 42 is a histogram of the maximum achievable data rate when all freechannels are aggregated corresponding to the CONUS shown in the map ofFIG. 41.

FIG. 43 is a graph of the achievable data rate corresponding to FIG. 42.

FIG. 44 is a map of the CONUS showing the LDACS data rate expected froman eight-channel aggregation.

FIG. 45 is a histogram showing the LDACS data rate expected from aneight-channel aggregation.

FIG. 46 is a graph showing the LDACS data rate corresponding to FIG. 45.

FIG. 47 is a diagram showing a cloud-based radio resource managementused in the enhanced LDACS system.

FIG. 48 is a block diagram showing the aircraft station and groundstation architecture for LDACS standards that may be used in theenhanced LDACS system.

FIG. 49 is a block diagram showing the enhanced LDACS systemarchitecture with application service examples.

FIG. 50 shows the enhanced LDACS system control plane protocol stackwith those areas that may be replaced with LDACS interfaces andcomponents.

FIG. 51 shows the enhanced LDACS system data plane protocol stack withthose areas that may be replaced with LDACS interfaces and components.

FIG. 52 is a block diagram showing the enhanced packet core and enhancedaircraft stations and ground stations used in the enhanced LDACS system.

FIG. 53 is a block diagram of the enhanced LDACS system showing anunmanned aerial system (UAS) and operative with a satellite link andLDACS and commercial cellular network.

FIG. 54 is a diagram showing interference between the LDACS overlay ofFIG. 14 and the DME/TACAN.

FIG. 55 is a satellite image of the greater Orlando, Fla. area selectedas a case study for the enhanced LDACS system having the overlay andunderlay of FIG. 14.

FIG. 56 is a diagram showing cell placement for the image area shown inFIG. 55.

FIG. 57 is a graph of coverage prediction for the area shown in theimage of FIG. 55.

FIG. 58 is a map showing deployment of the LDACS underlay and overlaycell layout and the DME/TACAN systems throughout the state of Florida.

FIG. 59 is a map representing an example of frequency assignment in theLDACS underlay cell layout used in the enhanced LDACS system.

FIG. 60 is a block diagram showing the LDACS data link layer and logicalchannel structure in the aircraft station and ground station used in theenhanced LDACS system.

FIG. 61 is a block diagram showing an acknowledged operation of theaircraft station data link service used in the enhanced LDACS system.

FIG. 62 is a block diagram showing an acknowledged operation of theground station data link service used in the enhanced LDACS system.

FIG. 63 is a combination block and flow diagram showing mutualauthentication and NAS security that may be modified for use in theenhanced LDACS system.

FIG. 64 is a block diagram showing the LTE user equipment (UE) protocolstack interface operative with the air station identification module(ASIM) used in the enhanced LDACS system.

FIG. 65 is a messaging flow diagram using the ASIM.

FIG. 66 is a schematic representation of the enhanced LDACS systemhaving peer-to-peer communications and a mesh capability.

FIG. 67 is a block diagram of the discovery plane for the aircraftstation to aircraft station interfacing in the peer-to-peercommunications shown in FIG. 66.

FIG. 68 is an example peer-to-peer messaging flow for the enhanced LDACSsystem.

FIG. 69 is a block diagram showing device-to-device communications forWiFi channel and LTE channel interface that may be incorporated into theenhanced LDACS system.

FIG. 70 is a schematic diagram of the enhanced LDACS system and showingan aircraft station that may be used with a satellite communicationsystem associated with the enhanced LDACS system.

FIG. 71 is a fragmentary block diagram showing the various airspacecomponents for the ADS-B system operative with the enhanced LDACSsystem.

FIG. 72 is a block diagram showing an overview of the ADS-B systemarchitecture that may be used with the enhanced LDACS system.

FIG. 73 is a block diagram showing use of the ADS-B system and theenhanced LDACS system.

FIG. 74 is a messaging sequence diagram for the peer-to-peercommunications used in the enhanced LDACS system.

FIG. 75 is another messaging sequence diagram similar to that shown inFIG. 74 and showing encryption.

FIG. 76 is a map of the CONUS showing a cell layout and cell count foran LDACS system having a cell nominal radius of 150 km.

FIG. 77 is a map of the CONUS showing the number of LDACS cells withinthe radio horizon of an aircraft station at an altitude of 18,000 feet.

FIG. 78 is a histogram showing the PDF for the aircraft stationoperating at an altitude of 18,000 feet shown in FIG. 77.

FIG. 79 is a graph showing the CCDF for the aircraft station operatingat an altitude of 18,000 feet shown in the map of FIG. 77.

FIG. 80 is another map of the CONUS showing the number of LDACS cellswithin the radio horizon of an aircraft at 35,000 feet.

FIG. 81 is a histogram showing the PDF for the aircraft stationoperating at the altitude shown in the map of FIG. 80.

FIG. 82 is a graph showing the CCDF for the aircraft operating at thealtitude shown in the map of FIG. 80.

FIG. 83 is a map of the CONUS showing the coverage prediction in theground-to-air direction for the aircraft at 35,000 feet.

FIG. 84 is a map of an LDACS frequency plan for the CONUS such as shownin FIG. 83.

FIG. 85 is a graph for the frequency plan output of a flight planproposal (AFP) for the aircraft communicating air-to-ground direction.

FIG. 86 is a histogram showing the number of occurrences versus thechannel for the frequency plan shown in FIG. 85.

FIG. 87 is a graph for the frequency plan of the aircraft station at theground-to-air direction similar to the graph shown in FIG. 85.

FIG. 88 is a histogram for the frequency plan for ground-to-airdirection similar to that of FIG. 86.

FIG. 89 is a map of the CONUS showing a nominal plan for the LDACSoverlay in the 1 GHz aeronautical band.

FIG. 90 shows the frequency band for the AFP.

FIG. 91 is a graph showing the cost function versus the frequency plan.

FIG. 92 shows the number of individual channels relative to thefrequency plan.

FIG. 93 is a map of the northeast section of the United States showingDME/TACAN sites.

FIG. 94 is a block diagram showing the enhanced LDACS system and showingan aircraft station and different controllers and antennae and relatedcomponents that may be used with the enhanced LDACS system.

FIG. 95 is a plan view of the LDACS cell showing positioning accuracywithin the variable of a circle as a single node labeled A.

FIG. 96 is a view similar to that of FIG. 95, but showing positioningwith three nodes labeled A, B and C.

FIG. 97 is a view similar to that shown in FIGS. 95 and 16B and showingpositioning with angle-of-arrival with the three nodes as A, B and C.

FIG. 98 is a world map showing different existing or proposed LORAN-C oreLORAN stations.

FIG. 99 is a 3-D chart showing the accuracy simulation of an LDACS basedAlternate Positioning, Navigation and Timing (A-PNT) of the enhancedLDACS system.

FIG. 100 is a world map showing the location of laboratories thatsynchronize with TAI (International Atomic Time).

FIG. 101 is a block diagram of a dual mode receiver that may be used forboth GPS and eLORAN.

FIG. 102 is a schematic representation of the enhanced LDACS systemusing eLORAN to assist in Positioning, Navigation and Timing.

FIG. 103 is a schematic diagram showing four different LDACS groundstations used in positioning for the enhanced LDACS system.

FIG. 104 is a schematic diagram showing propagation time and path lossfrom a transmit antenna to a receive antenna in the enhanced LDACSsystem.

FIGS. 105 and 106 are graphs showing respective vertical and horizontalantenna pattern characteristics.

FIG. 107 is a graph showing a 120 degree sector antenna pattern.

FIG. 108 is a block diagram of the enhanced LDACS system having roamingagreements and associated methods.

FIG. 109 is a block diagram of the enhanced LDACS system havingdifferent user classes and associated methods.

FIG. 110 is a block diagram of the enhanced LDACS system having channelaggregation and associated methods.

FIG. 111 is a block diagram of the enhanced LDACS system havingcloud-based management and associated methods.

FIG. 112 is a block diagram of the enhanced LDACS system combined withcellular telephone ground stations and associated methods.

FIG. 113 is a block diagram of the enhanced LDACS system having meshnetwork topology and associated methods.

FIG. 114 is a block diagram of an automatic dependentsurveillance-broadcast (ADS-B) device having coarse and fine accuracyflight position data and associated methods.

FIG. 115 is a block diagram of the enhanced LDACS system that determinesA-PNT information and associated methods.

FIG. 116 is a block diagram of the enhanced LDACS system having securityfeatures and associated methods.

FIG. 117 block diagram of the enhanced LDACS system having LDACSunderlay and overlay networks and associated methods.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION

The present invention will now be described more fully hereinafter withreference to the accompanying drawings, in which preferred embodimentsof the invention are shown. This invention may, however, be embodied inmany different forms and should not be construed as limited to theembodiments set forth herein. Rather, these embodiments are provided sothat this disclosure will be thorough and complete, and will fullyconvey the scope of the invention to those skilled in the art. Likenumbers refer to like elements throughout.

L-Band Characteristics

The L-band Digital Aeronautical Communication System (LDACS) is plannedwithin the Aeronautical Radio Navigation Services spectrum bandcorresponding to 960-1215 MHz. This spectrum currently includes manyimportant and heavily utilized wireless systems and a significant effortis required to transition the band from its current use to the one thatsupports deployment of LDACS.

This 960-1215 MHz band is allocated in all ITU (InternationalTelecommunication Union) Regions for the Aeronautical Radio-NavigationService (ARNS). Worldwide the band is used for: 1) Airborne CollisionAvoidance System (ACAS); 2) Automatic Dependent Surveillance-Broadcast(ADS-B); 3) Distance Measuring Equipment (DME); 4) Tactical AirNavigation (TACAN); 5) Secondary Surveillance Radar (SSR); 6) GlobalNavigation Satellite Systems (GNSS); 7) Military Identification Friendor Foe (IFF)—Mode 1 to 5; 8) Reverse-Identification Friend or Foe(Reverse IFF); 9) Military Joint Tactical Information Distribution; 10)System/Multifunctional Information Distribution System (JTIDS/MIDS); 11)Multilateration (MLAT)/Wide Area Multilateration (WAM); and 12)Radiotechniczny System Bliskiej Nawigacji (RSBN).

The frequency of 978 MHz is also used for the Universal AccessTransceiver (UAT) standardized by ICAO (International Civil AviationOrganization). Furthermore, ICAO envisions additional L-band DigitalAeronautical Communication Systems operating within this band. None ofthe listed services occupies the entire ARNS band, however, inaggregation, they make this band congested. Table 1 summarizes basicparameters associated with the individual ARNS services with respect tospectrum use.

TABLE 1 Use of ARNS Band by Various Services Communication ServiceFrequencies Type Comments 1 ACAS 1030 MHz for Digital interrogation (30MHz) communication 1090 MHz for responses with prescribed (30 MHz)message formats 2 ADS-B 1090 MHz for aircraft Digital It is FAA above18k feet (30 MHz) communication recommendation to 978 MHz for aircraftwith prescribed switch the below 18k feet message formats frequencies at18k feet border to alleviate the congestion of 1090 MHz frequency 3 DMEGround TX: Analogue pulse Even though the 962 MHz-1024 MHz pairsseparated channelization is 1151 MHz-1213 MHz by either done for theAirborne TX: 12 microsec (X), entire range 961- 1025 MHz-1087 MHz 30microsec (Y), 1150 MHz, the DME 1088 MHz-1150 MHz or 15 microsec signalis not BW = 1 MHz per channel (Z) utilizing many of its channels toallow for operation of other services in the band. Integer MHzfrequencies are used for carrier frequencies. 4 TACAN Ground TX:Analogue pulse TACAN utilizes the 962 MHz-1024 MHz pairs separated samechannel plan 1151 MHz-1213 MHz by either as DME. However, Airborne TX:12 microsec(X), the measurements 1025 MHz-1087 MHz 30 microsec(Y) aremore accurate 1088 MHz-1150 MHz than DME and include BW = 1 MHz perchannel orientation of the aircraft. Integer MHz frequencies are usedfor carrier frequencies. 5 SSR Ground TX: Analog pulses. SSR operates1030 MHz, BW = 21.5 MHz within the same Airborne TX: band as DME. It1090 MHz, BW = 14 MHz takes precedence and its frequencies are not usedfor DME assignments. In other words, DME channels within SSR bands arenot in service. 6 GPS (L5) GPS (L5) Spread spectrum Note: Galileo'sGalileo (E5) 1164 MHz-1191.795 MHz signal sent by authorized COMPASSGalileo (E5A, E5B) satellites. bandwidth is 51.15 GLONASS A: 1164MHz-1191.795 MHz MHz. Its (L3/L5) B: 1191.795 MHz-1215 transmission isas IRNSS MHz wide as 90 MHz. COMPASS 1195 MHz-1219 MHz GLONASS L3:1198.55 MHz-1204.88 MHz L5: 1176.45 +/− 12 MHz IRNSS 1176.45 MHz +/− 12MHz 7 IFF 1030 MHz for interrogation (30 MHz) 1090 MHz for responses (30MHz) 8 Reverse 1090 MHz for IFF interrogation (30 MHz) 1030 MHz forresponses (30 MHz) 9 JTIDS/MIDS Three bands are used: Digital FHOperates in a band a.k.a. 1: 969 MHz-1008 MHz transmission with as aguest - LINK 16 2: 1053 MHz-1065 MHz 3 MHz supposed to cause 3: 1113MHz-1206 MHz channelization no harmful and prescribed interference tomessage format. other users of the band. 10 MLAT/WAM 1090 MHz forinterrogation (30 MHz) 1030 MHz for responses (30 MHz) 11 RSBN 939.6MHz-1000.5 MHz This is a non-ICAO system designed by USSR and usedmostly for military aircraft (MIG and Sukhoi) 12 UAT 978 MHz BW = 1 MHz

Table 1 shows the existing use of the ARNS spectrum band, including thedifferent services, their range of frequencies, the type ofcommunication, and some details about each service. There are alsoplanned Aeronautical Mobile (Route) Service Systems [AM(R)S], whichcurrently are in the technology evaluation stage. Some prototypes havealready been tested. This ARNS band is congested and there are manyavailable services. However, the amount of spectrum is large, and manyservices are limited geographically to areas located adjacent anairport. As a result, in any given geographical location, there may besignificant sections of unused spectrum, especially at lower altitudes.The types of systems operating in this band are considered strategicallyimportant and the airline industry is likely to depend on them for manyyears.

This spectrum may be broadly divided into two sections, i.e., the firstsection for ground bases or stations AN(R)S (960-1164 MHz), and thesecond section for satellite systems as GNSS (1164-1215). Any proposedair-to-ground system should stay clear of the GNSS section of thespectrum because GNSS systems operate with weak signals and arevulnerable to interference.

The RSBN systems are used outside of the USA and the western world ingeneral and are not of significant concern in the US airspace. Theservices listed in rows 1, 2 5, 7, 8 and 10 of Table 1 use a smallsection of the band, for example, a 1030/1090 MHz pair of channels,which have a different bandwidth. Channel 1030 occupies about 18 MHz ofspectrum, while channel 1090 occupies about 14 MHz of spectrum. Theservice listed in row 12, (UAT) occupies a single channel centered at978 MHz. The bandwidth of this channel is 1 MHz (2 MHz with inclusion ofa guard band). The JTIDS/MIDS service, which is also referred to as Link16, is a tactical system used by NATO, and causes limited interferenceto other services. The air interface of JTIDS/MIDS Link 16 usesfrequency hopping to minimize any impact. When deployed, however, thissystem uses almost the entire available spectrum, but it is rarelydeployed, only in military operations.

Referring now to FIG. 1, the frequency assignments of Table 1 aretranslated into a chart format at 300 and also shows the proposed newgeneration digital air-to-ground and ground-to-air communication systemsas LDACS-1 for both reverse and forward links shown at 302 and 304. FromTable 1 and FIG. 1, the dominant service deployment for the spectrumcomes from DME and TACAN, which are essentially civilian and militaryversions of the same AN(R)R technology. Both DME and TACAN are used fordistance measurements where pulse pairs are sent from an aircraft to aground station. Once received, the ground station echoes the pulses andthe aircraft measures the time between the transmission and receptionallowing the aircraft to determine its distance from the fixed locationof the ground station. DME and TACAN are most commonly paired with VOR(Very High Frequency, Omni-Directional Range) equipment, which allows anaircraft to determine not only the distance to the ground station butalso the look angle.

Referring to FIG. 2, a map of the United States 310 shows the deploymentof DME and TACAN sites throughout the CONUS (Continental United States)and also shows portions of southern Canada and northern Mexico, referredto as CONUS+. The overall count of the illustrated sites is provided inTable 2. There are about 1,200 sites in the CONUS+ area.

TABLE 2 Site Count for Distance Measurement Sites in AN(R)S Band (as ofDecember 2019) Site Type Count DME (only) 70 TACAN (only) 84 VOR/DME 612VORTEC (VOR/TACAN) 386 Total 1196

LDACS Overview

In 2002, the International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO) recognizedthe need to improve the aeronautical communication system for airtraffic management (ATM) and air traffic control (ATC). As a result,researchers on both sides of the Atlantic developed plans for a newaeronautical communication, which came to be known as the FutureCommunication Infrastructure (FCI). The FCI includes severalcommunication links, including air-to-ground and satellite communicationlinks, and may later include air-to-air communication. The L-bandDigital Aeronautical Communication System (LDACS) is in the FCI categoryand was defined by Eurocontrol. After many years of standardization, thespecification document was produced as SESAR2020-PJ14-02-01 LDACS A/GSpecifications, Aug. 16, 2019, the disclosure which is herebyincorporated by reference in its entirety. The specification is notfinalized, and additional work is planned in accordance withstandardization timeline given in FIG. 3 at 314.

Some properties of LDACS as standardized in the A/G Specification arenow described. LDACS is standardized by ICAO and designed as a futureterrestrial data link for aviation. It is designed to be secure,scalable and spectrum efficient high data rate link that supports bothATS (Air Traffic Services) and AOC (Airline Operational Control)services. LDACS manages and services priorities and guaranteesbandwidth, low latency, and high continuity of service for safetycritical ATS applications while simultaneously accommodating lesssafety-critical AOC services. LDACS technology is based on an airinterface similar to the interface used in LTE/4G mobile radio, enablinghigh rate, low latency data link communications beyond the scope ofcurrent and proposed VHF communications.

The enhanced LDACS system may include a secure data link that enablessecure data communications for ATS and AOC services, including securedprivate communications for aircraft operators and ANSPs (Air NavigationService Providers). LDACS operates as a cellular communications systemand future terrestrial data link within the Future CommunicationsInfrastructure (FCI). The enhanced LDACS system may work with anupgraded satellite-based communications systems and be deployed withinthe FCI and constitute the main components of a multilink communicationwithin the FCI. Both technologies, LDACS and satellite systems, havetheir specific benefits and technical capabilities which complement eachother. Satellite systems are especially well-suited for large coverageareas with less dense air traffic, e.g. oceanic regions. LDACS iswell-suited for dense air traffic areas, e.g., continental areas or hotspots around airports and terminal airspace.

LDACS uses 964-1010 MHz with an initial deployment 964-979 MHz for theair-to-ground direction. LDACS uses 1110-1156 MHz with an initialdeployment 1110-1125 MHz for the ground-to-air direction. The amount ofspectrum that may be available for deployment is 2×46 MHz in FDD(Frequency Division Duplex) operation, which is flexible. Any channelfrom the air-to-ground portion of the spectrum may be paired with anychannel in the ground-to-air portion. An LDACS channel has a bandwidthof 500 kHz. Therefore, within the planned 46 MHz of paired spectrum,there are available 92 LDACS channels. LDACS may be deployed on a 500kHz raster in-between DME (or TACAN) channels, as best shown in thegraph 320 of FIG. 4, showing the interlacing between DME 324 and LDACSOFDM 326 (Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexing) channels. Also,the enhanced LDACS system may use the DME/TACAN frequency if thatfrequency is free within the geographical area of deployment, forexample, when traveling over an expanse of ocean having no DME stations,or over a land mass with few or no DME stations, such as the middle ofAfrica.

In a regular mode of operation, an LDACS cell covers up to 200 nauticalmiles, and in an extended mode, an LDACS cell may cover a radius of 400nautical miles. LDACS supports make-before-the-break handover andsupports Adaptive Coding and Modulation (ACM) and achievable ratesbetween 550 kbps to 2.6 Mbps per channel, corresponding generally tospectral efficiencies between 1 bps/Hz to 5 bps/Hz. LDACS supports bothvoice and data. Digital voice may be supported as either VoIP or througha dedicated voice interface. LDACS also supports Quality of Service(QoS) management of service priorities, secure communication, and anative IP based communication.

The enhanced LDACS system also provides support for navigation. LDACSground stations may transmit signals continuously and LDACS aircraftstations receive the ground station signals and perform pseudo-rangingto the ground stations. By having available four or more pseudo-ranges,an airborne station may determine its position in three-dimensionalspace, similar to GNSS (Global Navigation Satellite System), e.g., GPSor Galileo. LDACS ground stations act as “satellites-on-the-ground,”also termed pseudolites. For navigation, the synchronization among theLDACS ground stations may be more accurate than synchronization used forcommunications, where the synchronization error between ground stationsmay be less than 1.6 μs (microseconds) in communications. It needs to beless than 50 ns (nanoseconds) to support LDACS navigation. The requiredprecise synchronization for the LDACS navigation can be achieved inseveral ways. A first technique is to use affordable GNSS-disciplined,Rubidium atomic clocks at the LDACS ground stations, which have a smalldrift and can continue function with sufficient accuracy for severalhours in the case of a GNSS failure. A second technique uses timedistribution via satellite, and a third technique may use eLORAN for atiming reference.

The LDACS navigation capability has been simulated through flight trialswith DLR (German Aerospace Center). Theory and simulations predict anachievable accuracy of around 4 meters (RMSE). Flight trials have proventhat an accuracy of around 15 meters (RMSE) is achievable in practice,which is better than the achievable accuracy of current DMEs. The LDACSnavigation capability may be used for Alternative Positioning,Navigation and Timing (APNT) and as back-up for GNSS. The LDACSnavigation capability for APNT is supported by SESAR and a generalreference is included in the LDACS standardization within ICAO and bysome work from DLR.

From the spectrum chart of FIG. 1, it is evident that an importantconstraint on the LDACS deployment results from the non-interferencerequirement with DME/TACAN systems. The Link 16 service is deployedrarely and non-permanently as a tactical system. However, when the Link16 is deployed, the two technologies should tolerate each other. Exceptfor DME and the Link 16 service, all other communication systems in theL-band are adequately protected with appropriate guard bands.

Referring now to FIGS. 5 and 6, the interference conditions incommunication with the illustrated aircraft 330 between LDACS andDME/TACAN are illustrated. FIG. 5 shows the interference conditionbetween LDACS and DME/TACAN when equipment is co-located at the samesite 334, and FIG. 6 shows possible interference conditions whenequipment is not co-located at the same site 334,336. Even though LDACSis an FDD system, the duplexing space is not fixed and therefore, theair-to-ground frequency plan and ground-to-air frequency plan areessentially independent of each other. On the basis of the LDACSspecification, it is possible to implement constraints that aresatisfied by the LDACS frequency plan so that LDACS may operate as anoverlay to the DME/TACAN.

The ground-to-air LDACS uses channels 9-99 for a total of 91 channels.The odd channels are in between DME/TACAN assignments. The even channelsare on frequencies that may be used for DME/TACAN. In the LDACSspecification, a frequency reuse factor of N=7 is advocated. However,since the sites do not follow a regular hexagonal grid, this constraintis translated into a similar constraint such that all sites within radiohorizon of a flying aircraft should operate on different LDACS channels.The overlay between LDACS and DME/TACAN may be “one-to-one,” and channelseparation between LDACS and DME/TACAN on a given site may be largerthan eight (8) LDACS channels. This does not have to be the case and itis possible to co-locate LDACS with DME/TACAN. LDACS should not be on anadjacent channel to a DME assignment on any of the sites within theradio horizon of the ground station.

Enhanced Service Acquisition Including Network Scanning and Detection

When an LDACS aircraft station connects to a ground station signal perthe LDACS air-to-ground specification, the process results in theaircraft station having a control and data connection to the groundnetwork via a ground station. This process is depicted in the aircraftstation MAC state diagram shown in FIG. 7 generally at 340, which ispart of the LDACS specification.

The aircraft station enters an initial FSCANNING state upon power-up342. In this FSCANNING state 342, the aircraft station scans for RFenergy in the designated RF frequency LDACS channels. This processgenerates a limited data set for the more resource and time intensivesynchronization process that follows in the CSCANIING state 344. In thatCSCANNING state 344, the aircraft station attempts to synchronize to theLDACS forward channel signal on the channels where energy was detectedin the previous FSCANNING state 342. If the aircraft station is unableto synchronize to a particular channel, the next channel in the list isattempted. This repeats until the aircraft station is able tosynchronize to a forward link signal.

Once the aircraft station has successfully synchronized to the groundstation forward signal, the aircraft station decodes the overheadbroadcast messages from the forward link to determine the accessparameters for that ground station. When the access parameters have beendetermined, the aircraft station transitions to the CONNECTING state 346where it attempts to establish a connection with the ground stationusing a RACH (random access procedure). When the aircraft stationtransitions to the OPEN state 348, a dedicated control and data channel(logical) has been established and assigned to the aircraft station.When directed by the ground station, the aircraft station scans itsneighbors for potential handover 350. The aircraft station sends orreceives link control information via the logical control channel, and“user” payload data is transferred via the logical data channel.

This process as described lacks the features and procedures that arerequired to allow for disparate or fragmented ground network deployment.Deployment of the enhanced LDACS system as a network may include afractured network deployed by service providers for access, following asubscription model, or by companies looking for a private air-to-groundnetwork to service their own aircraft or unmanned aerial system. Thismay follow the pattern set by cellular connectivity rollout, which beganas disjointed localized carriers that gradually expanded their coverageareas before network consolidation bought the current limited number oflarge carriers. That technology employs specific standards that alloweach base station, similar to the LDACS ground station, to identify theprovider which the cellular device uses during its serving cellselection process to make sure it connects with the proper network. Tosupport this deployment model, two improvements are made to the basicLDACS waveform and connection process and incorporated into the enhancedLDACS system.

The enhanced LDACS system in a first example may add additionalbroadcast overhead messages that identify the network provider andvarious network organizational parameters. The aircraft station MACstate definition may be updated to add a separate state in the aircraftstation MAC that follows the CSCANNING state 344 where the aircraftstation compares the network provider code to a predefined set ofproviders that can provide service to the aircraft station. In a secondexample, this functionality may be incorporated as an enhancement to theCSCANNING state 344 rather than introducing a new state. In either case,the aircraft station uses the broadcast network provider identifier todetermine if it should mode on the state where it attempts RACHprocedure or whether it should return and synchronize with anothersignal in order to find the appropriate ground station forward linksignal.

Using the principles involved with cellular technology, it is expectedthat over time a set of “roaming” partnerships may be established toallow for increased coverage areas. In addition to the network provideridentifier, the transmitted broadcast overhead messages may includeadditional parameters that indicate various network organizations. Theseparameters include: (1) the physical site indicator for the groundstation node; (2) the antenna type and orientation for the forward linksignal; (3) a sector identifier for multi-sector ground station sites;and (4) a local area indicator to facilitate network routingorganization.

A centralized set of network brokers is established for user “roaming”costs to be transacted, similar to the roaming agreements with cellularnetwork providers and the clearing houses, such as Synerverse, Vodacomm,and similar entities. When a connection is established on a network, theclearing house may be notified, and the subscription validated prior toproviding services. This may result in varied level of servicesdepending on the subscription and specific inter-network roamingagreements, which may be established between the “home” networks. In allcases, the basic network awareness of the aircraft in the area may bemaintained, such as for air traffic control notifications. This basicawareness is analogous to the requirement for 911 services to allcellular devices, regardless of carrier subscription agreements or evenlack of a carrier at all.

An enhanced handover process may be implemented. According to the LDACSspecification, there are two CSCANNING states: (1) controlled and (2)ground station. In the aircraft station controlled state, the aircraftstation selects a candidate from the output of the Fast Scanning stateand attempts to synchronize. The ground station controlled scanningstate is initiated when the ground station wants a specified aircraftstation to conduct a handover. In order to select the appropriate groundstation to hand the aircraft station over to the current ground station,it must assess the signal power levels of all candidate and neighboringground stations as received by the aircraft station. These measurementsare periodically triggered by the current ground station using the STBmessage. After a successful ground station controlled scanningprocedure, the aircraft station physical layer may report the measuredsignal quality and optionally provide the content of the receivedPHY-SDUs (physical layer, service data units), if it could be decodedvia MAC to the LME. The collected power reports shall provide the basisfor handover decisions at the current ground station.

The aircraft station controlled state may be enhanced to account forsituations where the aircraft station may need to, without the aid ofthe ground station, fall back to a directed search instead of going backto a Fast Scanning state. This state is facilitated through thereception of neighboring cells, which are broadcast by the servingground station. These are various conditions in which the aircraftstation may begin evaluation of neighbor cells. These include as anexample the received power in dBm (RXP) when it falls below anestablished threshold.

A reacquisition state diagram 354 is similar to that of FIG. 7 and inthe OPEN (enhanced) state 348 (FIG. 8) and when the aircraft station PHYlayer device has determined that the forward link signal quality hasbecome unacceptably poor such as when the aircraft station is about toleave the coverage of the LDACS system network, the aircraft station LMEmay initiate sending the CELL-EXIT message to the current ground stationand transit or cross to the CSSCANNING state 344 instead of theFSSCANNING state 342. To facilitate this change, the aircraft stationmay maintain a list of the ground stations that have been broadcast inthe ACB for some period. The reacquisition state diagram 354 (FIG. 8)shows the cell exit 356 and the handover type I (HO Type I) with theOPEN state 340.

The Enhanced LDACS System Mobility and Handover

The enhanced LDACS system may include enhanced mobility for handoverprocedures between ground stations that may be triggered by the groundstation on the basis of power report messages received from the aircraftstation that are triggered by the ground station to a Scanning TableBroadcast (STB) message. A type 1 hard handover may involve groundstations that are not interconnected and do not coordinate to handle theprocedure. A type 2 seamless handover may involve ground stations thatare interconnected and coordinate the handover procedure.

A Type 1 hard handover may be triggered through a handover commandcontrol message (HO COM) where the HOT bit is cleared. The handovercommand control message (HO COM) may contain the ground stationidentifier (GS SAC) as a sub-net access code that the aircraft stationshall handover. Based on the GS SAC, an aircraft station may determinethe forward link and reverse link frequencies, which may be permanentlybroadcast via the BCCH as the broadcast channel. This process may beconducted through a cell entry procedure. If not acknowledged, a cellexit control message (CELL EXIT) may be sent.

For the commanding ground station, a transmission error of the handovercommand control message (HO COM) may be recognized through a keep-alivecontrol message (KEEP-ALIVE), which may be sent by the aircraft stationif it has no other control messages to send. A transmission error of thecell exit control message (CELL-EXIT) may be recognized through akeep-alive time-out at the Media Access Controller (MAC).

Referring to FIGS. 9 and 10, the LDACS mobility messaging with the LDACShandover type I is illustrated at the timing flow diagram at 360, andshowing the aircraft station 362 operative with the Scanning TableBroadcast (STB) and the ground station 1 364 and ground station 2 366.The flow diagram shows the ground station 1 implementing the ScanningTable Broadcast (STB) and a power report by the aircraft station 362back to the ground station 1, and followed with the handover command(HO-COM) from the first ground station to the aircraft station and thecorresponding cell entry requests and responses to the second groundstation 2 366. As illustrated in FIG. 10, the state diagram for theLDACS handover type I is shown at 370 with the fast scanningsuccessfully completed, including controlled scanning and a randomaccess timeout, including the hand off communications of type I and theopen state and cell exit back to the FSSCANNING 342.

The link management entities of adjacent ground stations may becoordinated by a common ground station controller and adjacent groundstations may be synchronized on the same time source with all groundstations in an area on the same time source. They may be triggeredthrough a handover command control message (HO COM) where the HOT bit isset. The handover command control message may contain the ground stationidentifier (GS SAC) and the new control offset from the next cell. Basedon the ground station SAC (Subscriber Access Code), an aircraft stationmay be able to determine the forward link and reverse link frequencies,which may be broadcast via the BCCH (broadcast Control Channel) via anACB (Adjacent Cell Broadcast) message. The updated sub-net access codeand the unique control offset for the next cell may be retrieved fromthe LDACS management entity (LME) of the next ground station. A type 2handover may be conducted through the transmission of a synchronizationtile in the DC (dedicated control) slot, which may be indicated by thenext LME through the transmission of a synchronization polling controlmessage (SYNC POLL) for the new control offset. The arbitrary hand-offboundaries may be based on flight routes.

Referring now to FIGS. 11 and 12, there are shown the flow diagram inFIG. 11 at 374 and state diagram for the LDACS handover type 2 processin FIG. 12 at 380. The scanning cable broadcast (STB), power report,handover command, and cell exit flow are similar to that with the LDACShandover type I (FIG. 9) with some variations. Changes may occur withthe synchronization tile and link management data flow for the LDACShandover type 2. Also, in the state diagram, the LDACS handover type 2includes a MAC frequency scan from the OPEN position 340 to the FSscanning 342 and a handover type 2 state with the OPEN condition asshown in the state diagram.

With the OPEN state 340, the aircraft station may be able to transmitand receive user plane data. When there is no handover (HO) command tothe next ground station, and when the aircraft station PHY has indicatedthe forward link (FL) signal quality is unacceptably poor, e.g., whenthe aircraft station is about to leave the coverage of the LDACSnetwork, the aircraft station LME may initiate sending of the CELL EXITmessage to the current ground station and transit to the FSSCANNINGstate 342. This may require unnecessary time to reacquire conductivitywith the ground station. Adding neighbor lists through the groundstation broadcast may allow the aircraft station to move into theCSSCANNING state 344 first before falling back into the FSSCANNING state342 if the CSSCANNING state fails.

A Neighbor List and the mobility management service may be supported bythe broadcast control messages that are adjacent cell broadcasts (ACB)and Scanning Table Broadcast (STB). The adjacent cell broadcastindicates neighboring cells and the scanning table broadcast indicatesthe aircraft station, which is allowed to scan adjacent cells during thenext broadcast control slot. The adjacent cell broadcast (ACB) istransmitted periodically, for example, once per SF (super frame). TheACB control message may be transmitted via the broadcast control channel(BCCH) using the broadcast (BC) slot nos. 1 and 3. The ACB controlmessage contains information about the ground station identifier (GSSAC), the forward link channel (FLF), and the reverse link channel (RLF)of one adjacent cell. If more than one adjacent ground station is to beannounced, multiple ACB messages may be sent.

The Idle State does not exist in the normal LDACS specification and KEEPALIVE messages are sent back and forth when there is no data to send inorder to maintain the communications link alive. In the state diagram384 of FIG. 13, creating an Idle State 388 may potentially allow forbetter use of resources. A dynamic allocation may increase the aircraftstation's density support and channel aggregation may increase bandwidthneeds. Paging may also be introduced. The enhanced LDACS system networkmay contact an aircraft station in the Idle State 388. An example of thestate diagram for the Idle State 388 is shown in FIG. 13 showing thehandover type 1 with the OPEN state 340 included in the handover type 2350, and the Idle State 388 with the cell exit from the OPEN state tothe CSSCANNING state 344.

Timers may be implemented in a Reverse Link Keep Alive Timer, LME_T_RLK,which may have a default timer for 10 seconds and may indicate whetheran aircraft station is still within a cell or not within that cell. Onexpiration, the aircraft station may be considered as absent and may bederegistered from the ground station. It is possible this may be resetin an Idle State 388 and possibly can be repurposed. The aircraftstation Forward Link Keep Alive Timer, LME_T_FLK, which may have adefault of about 10 seconds, may operate as an indicator for theaircraft station whether it may be connected to the ground station ornot. On expiration, the aircraft station LME may change its status toFSSCANNING state 342 and trigger its Media Access Controller (MAC) tostart the fast scanning procedure. The ground station Forward Link KeepAlive Timer, LME_T1_FLK, may have a default of about three seconds. Onexpiration, if no message is scheduled, the ground station LME maytransmit a keep alive message to the specific aircraft station.Reception of the keep alive message may reset to keep the alive timer inthe aircraft station LME.

Paging may occur. For example, there may be an overload of theSTAY_ALIVE message. On the ground station to the aircraft stationcommunications link, there may be an indication to send data and adetermination may be made to keep the timer active for the aircraftstation to ground station link. It may be repurposed because the groundstation may not be required to know that the aircraft station isattached to the ground station, but there should be some indication ofhow long the context should be kept. Once the aircraft station registerswith the new ground station, the ground station controller may informthe prior ground station for deregistration purposes if required.

It is possible to implement a new paging message that contains one ormore aircraft station subscriber access codes (AS SAC). There may bemore than one to account for situations where multiple aircraft stationsmay be reached. There may be a determination of what area may be paged.For example, in a large cell area, the last “seen” ground station andadjacent ground stations may be taken into account. An aircraft stationmay have migrated to the next ground station and the original groundstation may never receive the CELL EXIT message. On a new registration,the ground station controller may be aware of the new serving groundstation.

Referring now again to FIG. 13, a portion of the state diagram 384 forthe OPEN 340 to Idle State 388 is shown. Once the ground station detectsinactivity from the aircraft station, after a time out period, theground state may reallocate resources and start sending KEEP ALIVEmessages. This may assume the dynamic resource allocation such thatresources will be minimized before transitioning to IDLE. In the IdleState 388, the aircraft station may maintain synchronization with theground station, decode broadcast messages for at least the adjacent cellbroadcast, and listen to the KEEP ALIVE message in case there is data toreceive.

The ground station may initiate an IDLE 388 to OPEN 340. For example,when the ground station has data to send to the aircraft station, it maytransmit a KEEP ALIVE message indicating data to send. The aircraftstation may respond and receive a resource allocation message and thechannel may again be ready for data transfer. The aircraft station mayinitiate an IDLE 388 to OPEN 340. For example, when the aircraft stationhas data to send, the ground station may transmit a cell entry request.This may assume the context is still active, but the opposite may befaster.

A reselection process may occur. While in the IDLE state 388, theaircraft station may continue to monitor the received power of theground station to which it was last connected and the adjacent groundstations that are being broadcast by the “serving” ground station. Whenthe aircraft station PHY layer device has determined that the forwardlink signal quality is unacceptably poor, such as when the aircraftstation is about to leave the coverage of the LDACS system network, theaircraft station LME may initiate sending the CELL EXIT message to thecurrent ground station and transit to the CSSCANNING state 344. Thefirst ground station to attempt should be the strongest monitoredadjacent ground station and then proceed down the list in order until aconnection has been established. After the connection has beenestablished, the ground station may move the aircraft station into theIDLE state 388 if there is no data to send.

Multiple Network Coexistence

The enhanced LDACS system as described above is an improvement over theLDACS standard and its defined MAC and PHY device layers andincorporates modern cellular industry elements to provide a networkarchitecture that can support multiple network providers. In order toconnect to the LDACS network, the aircraft station transitions throughfour states as described above in a procedure referred to as the cellsearch: FSCANNING 342, CSCANNING 344, CONNECTING 346, and OPEN 348 asshown in FIG. 7. In the FSCANNING state 342 the aircraft station MAC maytrigger fast scanning requests of the LDACS channels and repeat scanningrequests for each channel in round-robin, while it remains in theFSCANNING state. Once power has been detected on an LDACS channel, theaircraft station MAC moves into the CSCANNING state 344 and begins itsattempts to decode the LDACS channel. The aircraft station MAC maytransition between FSCANNING 342 and CSCANNING states until a LDACSchannel successfully decodes and the aircraft station MAC transitionsinto the CONNECTING state 346. In that state, the aircraft station MACwaits for the successful synchronization of the physical layer and theMAC framing. After synchronization has been achieved, the aircraftstation MAC may perform the random access procedure (RACH) to requestcell entry and synchronize the reverse link. Once the ground stationallocates an aircraft station Sub-net Access Code (AS SAC), the aircraftstation MAC moves into the OPEN state 348, allowing user communication.

In order to support multiple network providers, the enhanced LDACSsystem adapts the cell search procedure to include a Public Land MobileNetwork (PLMN) code search. Ground stations transmit their PLMN as partof their broadcast information. In the CONNECTING state 346, theaircraft station evaluates the decoded PLMN code to determine priorityof LDACS channels prior to attempting random access procedures (RACH).If a valid PLMN is not decoded, the aircraft station attempts randomaccess procedures (RACH) with the strongest tower as part of a groundstation in order to gain connectivity for critical communications, suchas air traffic control, while non-critical communications, for example,on-board user data, may not be available.

In order to evaluate the decoded PLMN, the aircraft station retrieves astored PLMN list and identifies itself to the ground station and networkthat the aircraft station is attempting to attach. The Aircraft StationIdentification Module (ASIM) as described above is analogous to a 4G LTEUSIM. The ASIM or similar module having the same functionality providesnetwork information capable of identifying the aircraft station to thenetwork and identifying the ground station to the aircraft station. Theaircraft station evaluates and identifies itself to multiple networksystems for deployment to have multiple co-existing networks as part ofthe enhanced LDACS system.

Network Deployment

The cost of deploying a wide area or national data may result in thecreation of multiple individual sub-networks. Poor planning in theinitial stages of a national network rollout may result in a disjoinedcollection of networks and associated user access sites if there isimproper planning during the early stages of the capability rollout. Autility or commercial communication network architecture may be used asa model. For example, each area may be divided and allocated to aspecific network operator, which establishes connections and providesservices to all paying subscribers that access their network.

By leveraging a commercial communications network approach, overlappingservices are available in high usage areas. It is possible that roamingrelationships are not universal and specific carriers may establishunique relationships among each other and may not provide access tothose outside of their network agreements. Regardless of the model usedfor network deployment, an organized approach for data management may beestablished, similar to the use of access point names (APN) within thecellular community. Data is segmented for management and distribution tospecific data centers that may help secure user data more efficiently.For example, each of the many multi-modal carriers may establish theirown APN (access point name) to ensure that each carrier has access toall of their transit and package data, while receiving none of the datafrom a competitive carrier or provider. When user organizations aresmaller or regionalized, the network may assign the local user to anavailable access point name (APN) with capacity to support theirtraffic. Although not specifically aligned to only their data, thiscombined APN approach provides sufficient security, while optimizingavailable resources and minimizing network expenses.

LDACS Overlay for Command, Control and Communication

The enhanced LDACS system includes deployment in the describedmulti-tier network configuration. Although the LDACS system may be usedin any geographic region, the description proceeds where the enhancedLDACS system deployment is over the CONUS. The same deploymentprinciples may be used globally.

Referring now to FIG. 14, there is illustrated a multi-tier networkconfiguration at 400 for the enhanced LDACS system underlay/overlay.Three separate communication systems are deployed within a relativelysmall geographical area and all systems use the AeronauticalRadio-Navigation Service (ARNS) frequency band. The DME/TACAN existingsites are shown by the large circles 402 and the area covered by asingle DME/TACAN site is usually quite large. Typically, the radius of aDME/TACAN cell 402 is on the order of about 100 km. There are fourDME/TACAN cells 402 shown in FIG. 14 by the four overlapping circles.The LDACS underlay (LDACS-u) cells are illustrated by the four hexagons404 and these cells are also large. The LDACS-u system providescoast-to-coast coverage with sufficient initial capacity. A sampledesign for a nominal cell radii is about 150 km. Each LDACS-u cell 404may operate a single LDACS channel, and because the LDACS channel isrelatively narrow, e.g., about 500 kHz, the capacity of the initialdeployment is not very large. The initial traffic load on the system islow and matches the initial capacity. As the traffic load increases,additional channels may be added to the site, or cell spitting may beperformed. Both of these techniques are standard for capacity increasein cellular systems. It should be understood that a higher frequencyreuse in the underlay means more capacity. If certain cells are athigher loading, it is possible to borrow channels from nearby lowercapacity ground stations.

The smaller hexagonal cells 406 illustrated in FIG. 14 are the LDACSoverlay (LDACS-o) cells, which are deployed locally and over an areathat bounds the intended deployment. The transmission powers and linkbudget for the LDACS-o 406 are adjusted so that these LDACS cell areasand more precisely, their volumes, are relatively small. The radii ofthe LDACS-o cells 406 are on the order of few kilometers, e.g., about3-10 km. Also, the portion of the airspace served by LDACS-o cells 406is close to the ground, e.g., about 0 to 500 meters.

All three systems, i.e., 1) the DME/TACAN system and cells 402, 2) theLDACS-u system and cells 404, and 3) the LDACS-o system and cells 406,share the same radio spectrum. The inter-system and intra-systeminterference are managed through careful allocation of the availableDME/TACAN and LDACS channels, such as by an enhanced LDACS systemcontroller 408 shown in FIG. 14. It should be understood that it ispossible to use multi-RAT receivers (Radio Access Technology).

Prioritization and Preemption

When there are a limited number of aircraft in a particular area, andwith the current requirements for visual line of sight (VLOS) control ofunmanned aircraft, route planning is less critical. As aircraftoperators move toward beyond line of sight (BLOS) flight of unmannedaircraft, coordination with other aircraft, both manned and unmanned,will be a critical action to ensure that collisions do not occur. Thiscoordination may include the use of air traffic control transponderinformation, collision avoidance sensors, coordinated location peer-peercommunication, and route scheduling.

Using this information, route prioritization and flight optimization maybe accomplished by employing a hierarchy of importance to develop flightroute planning tools. An example entry level prioritization of aircraftmay include: (1) Defense Department; (2) Law Enforcement (Local, State,then Federal); (3) Medical Evacuation; (4) Humanitarian Services; (5)Human Transport; (6) Commercial Perishable Goods; (7) CommercialNon-Perishable Goods; and (8) Private Use—Recreational. As examples ofpossible flight missions, the enhanced LDACS system may be configurableto modify mission types and priority and add new mission types. Whenassigning a priority class to an aircraft, the user and aircraft may bevalidated as properly classified by an FAA regulatory inspector prior toauthorization. This authentication service may be included in the saleof radio devices that operate the enhanced LDACS system.

In operation and in preparation to fly, the aircraft owner/pilot definesthe launch location, launch time, destination location, mission type,aircraft type, and maximum flight times. Based upon this information,the pilot submits a request for flight path and channel assignment. TheUAS (unmanned aircraft system) Operations Control Center verifies therequest parameters, checks to ensure that the flight route will beavailable, and approves the flight. This flight route planning processmay be manually accomplished or automated.

With the flight approved and scheduled, the command and control channelassignment may be reserved for the mission. Depending on the flightpath, duration of flight, and surrounding missions, the command andcontrol communications link may require mid-flight channelreassignments, which may be coordinated to allow hand-off without a riskof lost communications during flight. It is possible that aircraftstations may be allowed to auto negotiate channels and the enhancedLDACS system may ensure that the aircraft may reserve space on thenetwork to avoid loss of communications mid-flight.

During a flight, a higher priority mission may be scheduled for the sameairspace location and timeframe, and the command and control link may beused to communicate updates to the flight path for each aircraftstation. In addition, each aircraft station may use on-board sensor datato scan for potential collision threats. Should an obstacle beidentified, the en route aircraft may report the threat type andlocation so that additional aircraft stations in the area may benotified and potentially rerouted. These in-flight threats may includewildlife or uncontrolled aircraft stations and other threats. By usingprioritization and preemption, it is possible to have higher levels ofservice with a higher price and include, for example, prioritized data.

As noted before, prioritization and preemption is provided in theenhanced LDACS system to provide support for different user classes thataccess the enhanced LDACS system and its network resources.Prioritization and preemption provides a mechanism for handlingcongestion and supports service level differentiation, for example,basic services versus premium services. The enhanced LDACS systemprovides prioritization of certain types of users, for example,military, commercial, and civil users. Prioritization enables a user'sapplication or a user's network use to take precedence over anotheruser's application network usage. Preemption concerns the enhanced LDACSsystem's network capability that permits authorized high prioritytraffic. For example, military aircraft or premium subscribers may havepriority and use the resources assigned to lower priority traffic. Thequality of service (QoS) concerns the overall performance of a telephonyor a data network, particularly as seen by the users of the network andis measured by such factors as error rates, bandwidth, throughput,transmission delay, availability and jitter.

Reference is now made to be enhanced LDACS system protocol stack of FIG.15 at 420, showing the ground station network 422, the aircraft station424, and the associated control planes 426,428 and user planes 430,432for both the ground station network 422 and aircraft station 424. Theground station network 422 includes the enhanced packet core (EPC) andthe IMS and OSS/BSS as part of the higher layers, and the aircraftstation 424 includes the ASIM, also in the higher layers. The L1, L2 andL3 layers of both the ground station network and aircraft stationinclude similar functional components as illustrated.

Referring now to FIG. 16, the IP flow through the enhanced LDACS systemis illustrated generally at 440, showing a representation of thephysical channel 442 and the aircraft station 444 and the ground station446, including the enhanced packet core (EPC) 450. The differentchannels are illustrated, and the IP streams are mapped into bearers fordelivery, including both radio 452 and the enhanced packet core bearers454. There is a one-to-one relationship between the radio and the EPCbearers 452,454. The bearers are mapped to logical channels 456, whichare then organized into transport channels 458 that are routed to thephysical channel 442 for transmission.

The enhanced LDACS system uses a QCI (Quality of Service) (QOS) classindicator) assigned to each bearer to ensure the proper handling of thebearer's traffic through the enhanced LDACS system. A QCI is a scalarthat is used within the access network as a reference to specificparameters that control packet forwarding and impact scheduling weight,admission thresholds, and link-layer protocol configurations. QOSparameters for the IP streams are used to map the bearer and are a keyfactor in the link-layer access scheduling in the ground station for theQCI's.

The QCI include a quality of service factor and allows a serviceprovider to assign and manage radio and network resources based on thesubscription levels and data service types. It may classify IP trafficinto different data flows with different classes and apply maximumbandwidth policies and map to different bearers. It may apply quality ofservice rules such as priority and bandwidth control during each dataflow to deliver data.

Referring now to FIG. 17, there are illustrated components that impactthe quality of service shown generally at 460 and including the enhancedaircraft station 462, enhanced ground station 464, enhanced packet core466, and PDN's 468 that include the different services, and the dataflow for the default bearer and the dedicated bearer. The different QoSpolicies are shown in the P-GW component.

Referring now to FIG. 18, there are illustrated generally at 470 thequality of service functions as the air station 472, ground station 474,transport 476, and the P-GW 478, and each having the listed functions.The bearer may be established when an aircraft station is taxed to theenhanced LDACS system network and an IP address assigned and a defaultbearer established. The network may establish a default bearer withfalse settings and a potential future upgrade may make these defaultsvary among subscribers. When a user attempts to use a service thatrequires a different quality of service than the current default bearer,it may support a dedicated bearer and establish it on demand. Thedefault bearer may last even while no service is being used, and lastuntil the aircraft station detaches from the network.

The bearers include transmission paths between the aircraft station 472and the P-GW 478 to deliver user traffic. Different types may include adefault, and a dedicated resource type may include a guaranteed bit rate(GBR) and bandwidth and a dedicated bearer may include a non-guaranteedbit rate (non-GBR) with a best effort bandwidth and a default ornon-dedicated bearer.

The bearer quality of service (QoS) parameters may be a standardizedperformance indicator (QCI), and may include the resource type,priority, packet delay, error loss rate, and similar functions. Theallocation and retention priority (ARP) factors may be used to determineif an old bearer can be removed and a new bearer created. Anotherparameter for the bearer QOS may be the bit rate and the bandwidth limitthat applies to a single GBR bearer. The PDN aggregate bandwidth limitmay apply to the total bandwidth of all non-GBR bearers per the PDN. Theaircraft station aggregate bandwidth limit may apply to the totalbandwidth of all non-GBR bearers per the aircraft station with multiplePDNs.

Referring now to FIG. 19, there is shown a chart at 480 of a QCIexample, showing the resource type with a resource type column giving aGBR as a guaranteed bit rate and a non-GBR non-guaranteed bit rate. Thepriority column gives a scheduling weight and the packet delay budgetcolumn shows an example of allowable jitters, such as 30 microseconds.The packet error loss rate column gives a number, such as 10⁻⁵, as anacceptable packet error loss rate. Example services are illustrated,such as the intelligent transport systems as an example of cellular typeservices.

Referring now to Table 3, there are shown the potential QCI for theenhanced LDACS system, showing the different QCI numbering, resource,priority, delay, error loss, and the example services, to give apotential mapping between traffic types and the QCI.

TABLE 3 Potential QCI for Enhanced LDACS System Error QCI ResourcePriority Delay Loss Ex. Services 1 3 100 ms 10⁻² Cockpit Voice 2 2 150ms 10⁻⁶ Controller Pilot Data Link Communications (CPDLC) GBR 3 4 300 ms10⁻² A-PNT 4 8 500 ms 10⁻² ADS-B 5 Non-GBR 7 100 ms 10⁻³ Passenger Data

Packet filtering may include data from packet data networks and PDNsthat arrive at the P-GW in the enhanced packet core. Data may befiltered through IP packet filters to place the data on bearers, and mayinclude the source IP address, source port number, destination IPaddress, destination port number, and protocol ID.

Referring now to Table 4, there is illustrated IP packet filters,showing the filter rule and the different sources and destinations withthe protocol ID and bearer ID.

TABLE 4 IP Packet Filters Filter Rule Desti- Source Destination nationProtocol Bearer Source IP Port IP Port ID ID 8.8.8.8 * 192.168.8.123 443TCP 8 * * 192.168.8.123 * * 5 192.168.8.123 443 * * UDP 3

The prioritization and preemption are used to provide a preferred accessto the enhanced LDACS resources to a user as an aircraft station overother users. The concept of the “access class” may be of a value definedfor each aircraft station that defines a level of access priority fornetwork resources. The access class can be used to support a “premium”service as a subscriber model, where users pay higher rates foradditional bandwidth access, throughput and “emergency services” toensure first responders, military aircraft or the like that have accessto data services beyond basic flight communications. There are alsoallocation and retention priority (ARP) characteristics that define therelative importance of a resource request and allows deciding whether abearer can be established or modified, or needs to be rejected in caseof resource limitations. The ground network has the EPC plus the groundstations use the access class to effect the aircraft station's resourceaccess scheduling and may be used as a biasing parameter in the groundnetwork to determine how linked resources should be shared amongdifferent types of users.

The prioritization in the enhanced LDACS system is similar to thatprioritization used in cellular systems, and may enable preferred linkaccess scheduling of higher access classes over lower classes. For theenhanced LDACS system, prioritization may be applied to non-critical QCIbearers, e.g., lower priority, and non-critical QCI bearers of a higheraccess class. Some aircraft stations may be preferred for linkscheduling over lower access class aircraft stations.

Preemption may be applied in the enhanced LDACS in a different mannerthan in cellular systems. For example, in cellular systems,prioritization may be used to limit access to only higher accessclasses. This includes the ability to “drop” lower access class users toservice designated higher access class devices. For an enhanced LDACSsystem, because critical data such as the air traffic controlcommunications may be carried over the LDACS communications link, thecellular concept of preemption may not be applicable. In the enhancedLDACS system, preemption may enable the ground station to tear downestablished bearers for lower access class aircraft stations, and allowhigher access class aircraft stations to access the link resourceswhenever the link access scheduler is unable to meet the QCI performancerequired for those bearers.

Referring now to FIG. 20, an LTE QOS example is illustrated generally at490 showing the PDN connections 492 as part of the EPS session 1 494 andthe different resource types 496, QOS parameters of the EPS bearer 498,QOS parameters of the SDF 500, dedicated bearer 502, and the UE,IP 504.

Channel Aggregation

The enhanced LDACS system may include channel aggregation added with theFDD and the TDD peer-to-peer communications and protocol to achievehigher data rates. Channel aggregation combines multiple LDACS carrierstogether, potentially on separate bands to increase the availablebandwidth and capacity for a user. Referring now to FIG. 21, there areshown three potential channel locations for the channel aggregation inthe enhanced LDACS system and more than two channels may be aggregatedtogether as generally shown at 510. As a non-limiting example, it ispossible for the system to enable channel aggregation and combineadjacent channels in the same band for intra-band contiguous channelaggregation 512. The aircraft station or ground station may consider theaggregated channel as a single large channel from an RF perspective. Thesystem may use one physical transceiver with multiple RF logical paths.Due to situations where channels are not adjacent, however, morephysical transceivers may be required. As illustrated, the enhancedLDACS system may also incorporate intra-band, non-contiguous aggregation514, or inter-band non-contiguous aggregation 516.

Referring to FIG. 22, four possible transmitter designs are illustratedas options A, B, C, and D, and may be used in the three aggregationexamples of FIG. 21. Option A shows a single transmitter change circuitthat includes a multiplexer baseband circuit 520 coupled to an inversefast Fourier transform (IFFT) circuit 522 and digital-to-analogconverter (DAC) 524 and mixer 526 and power amplifier 528. Once the RFsignal is power amplified in the power amplifier 528, it is filteredwithin RF filter 530 and output via a single antenna 532. Option B showstwo transmitter circuit chains each one having the multiplexer basebandcircuits 520, IFFT 522, DAC 524, and only one of the chains having themixer 526. A combiner 534 combines the signals from the two chains, andthe signal is mixed within the mixer 536, amplified within RFPA 528,filtered within the RF filter 530, and output via single antenna 532.Option C is similar to the circuit of Option B, but includes in bothtransmitter chains the mixer 526 with a combiner 534 and followed bysimilar components as in Option B. Option D is similar to Option Cexcept it also includes an option of a single antenna 532 or a dualantenna 532 a, 532 b with two RF filters 530. For each option, thecorresponding contiguous, non-contiguous for intra-band aggregation andnoncontiguous for inter-band aggregation is indicated as to whether thecircuit may be used for that type of aggregation.

The inter-band, non-contiguous aggregations 516 shown in the thirdcolumn may require consideration to reduce intermodulation and crossmodulation from the transceivers. The receiver may use a singlewideband-capable RF front end and a single FFT, or alternatively,multiple RF front ends and FFT engines. The choice between single ormultiple transceivers may come down to the comparison of powerconsumption, cost, size, and flexibility to support other aggregationtypes. An initial rollout of the enhanced LDACS system may use a singleband, which removes the need to incorporate inter-band channelaggregation, thus reducing complexity at the aircraft station and groundstation. Aggregating channels may cause an increase in the RF bandwidthas processed by the aircraft station and ground station and it may benecessary to ensure that operation over maximum aggregation bandwidththat is consistent without a reduction in performance.

When carrier aggregation is employed, there are a plurality of servingcells, one for each channel or carrier. A primary or fundamental servingcell (PSC) is served by the primary or fundamental carrier. The otherchannels or carriers may be referred to as supplemental carriers cells.

LDACS FDD channel aggregation may be directed by an LDACS ManagementEntity Controller (LMEC) as part of the enhanced LDACS system. The EGSCmay have a full picture of the frequencies and resources in use at eachground station. The supplemental carriers are added and removed asrequired, while the fundamental carrier is only changed at handover.LDACS TDD channel aggregation may also operate without the operation ofthe EGSC, thus requiring a slightly different LDACS channel aggregationprotocol. The host aircraft station as defined in the peer-to-peer LDACSprotocol for the enhanced LDACS system may allocate the availablefrequencies and channel resources based upon loading and link metrics.It may also be possible to incorporate frequency aggregation.

The channel aggregation techniques to increase channel capacity asdescribed above may be applied to: (1) Air Traffic Control (ATC); (2)Airline Operations Control (AOC); (3) Alternative Positioning andNavigation Timing (APNT); and General Ip Connectivity (GIpC).

The channel aggregation as described takes advantage of thechannelization and spectral efficiency of the enhanced LDACS system'sair interface to increase data rate. Channel aggregation in an examplerequires bundling of several LDACS channels into a single data pipe,which can be shared between all the aircraft that are within thecoverage area of the LDACS cell.

Channel Aggregation and Expanded Bandwidth Channels

In an example of channel aggregation, it is possible to employ channelexpansion. The enhanced LDACS system chooses an LDACS channel and addsadditional subcarriers to the left and right to consume free bandwidth.The growth of each side may be in multiples of LDACS channels, and toensure backwards compatibility, it may be grown in odd numbers, with oneLDACS channel, and then grow that one LDACS channel to consume threeLDACS channels worth of bandwidth.

Referring now to FIGS. 23 and 24, there is illustrated the OFDM physicallayer that has a 64 FFT size and subcarrier spacing in this example of9.765 kHz, and in this example, 50 subcarriers (+1, DC). These graphs(FIG. 23) and mapping (FIG. 24) show the sync symbols 540, null symbols542, pilot symbols 544, and the data symbols 546. There may be 7 leftand 6 right guard or null subcarriers 542 and the occupied bandwidth isabout 498.05 KHz. There are 54 OFDM symbols per frame in this exampleand a frame duration of 6.48 milliseconds (ms) and two OFDM symbols usedfor synchronization and a data capacity of about 2,442 symbols perframe. These data characteristics correspond to the LDACS forward linksignal characteristics.

The forward link transmit channel mask is shown in the graphs of FIGS.25 and 26, with FIG. 25 showing the out-of-band domain and FIG. 26showing the LDACS channel mask. With the channel aggregation and theexpanded bandwidth channel, the channel aggregation may use the standardLDACS physical channel. This is an opportunity since there is norequirement for contiguous channels and adjacent channels may be lessdesirable. The LDACS ground station may be enhanced to allow forcoordinated resource assignments across multiple channels as carriers.With the expanded bandwidth channel, key elements of the enhanced LDACSsystem are maintained, including a frame/multi-frame/super framestructure and a subcarrier spacing of about 9.765625 kHz. Themodulation, coding and timing may correspond to a “out-of-band domain”channel mask. The standard LDACS system may be expanded and multiple 500kHz LDACS channels may be bound into one expanded channel, and thisincreases FFT sizing to increase the frame data bandwidth.

There may be significant spectral overlap between adjacent LDACSchannels and inter-cell interference. FIG. 27 shows the adjacentoccupied channels (channels 1 and 2) with the sync symbols 540, nullsymbols 542, pilot symbols 544, and data symbols 546. Adjacent channelinterference is shown in the graphs of FIGS. 28 and 29 with first andsecond signals 550,552 compared. The graph in FIG. 30 shows a 1.5 MHzexpanded channel example where the FFT size changes to 256 as part ofthe OFDM physical layer for the subcarrier spacing of 9.765625 kHz and152 (+1, DC), and 50 left and 50 right guard or null subcarriers, and anoccupied bandwidth of about 1.494 MHz.

To minimize the amount of the channel control information and tominimize the intra system interference, two types of LDACS channels maybe defined. The first LDACS channel type may be fundamental channels,which are always active and carry the LDACS cells' broadcastinformation. There is at least one fundamental channel per cell. Thesecond type of enhanced LDACS channel may be supplemental channels,which support the cell's capacity needs and usually carry only userdata. When there is no data to transmit, supplemental channels may beinactive and the overall intra system interference is reduced.

Two basic strategies may be used in assignment of the supplementalchannels: (1) static assignment, and (2) dynamic assignment of thechannels as explained below.

Channel Aggregation with Static Assignment

In the static assignment of supplemental channels, each enhanced LDACSsystem cell is allocated one fundamental and zero or more supplementalchannels. The frequency plan for a static assignment is devised up-frontand radio resource management is performed by each enhanced LDACS systemcell individually. The cell may require aircraft within its coveragearea to measure interference on the set of channels that are assigned tothe cell using a spectral analyzer or similar spectrum analyzer or RFenergy sensor device. Typically, the same receiver that is used forcommunication is used to perform these measurements. Due to the timeorganization of the air interface, there are time intervals where theaircraft radio is neither transmitting nor receiving. The feedbackinformation from the aircraft may be used in the resource management toprioritize the order on how channels are aggregated. The channels thathave less interference as measured by the aircraft should be aggregatedfirst.

Reference is now made to the enhanced LDACS system of FIG. 31, where amap of the southeastern section of the CONUS is illustrated generally at560. The enhanced LDACS system is frequency planned so that each cell562 has three LDACS channels in both ground-to-air and air-to-grounddirection, indicated by the six listed channels at each ground stationlocation. For example, the highlighted cell 564 around Atlanta, Ga. useschannels 24, 47 and 79 in the air-to-ground direction, and uses channels319, 373 and 386 for ground-to-air communication.

This channel aggregation illustrated in FIG. 31 is frequency planned sothat it avoids all interference to DME/TACAN. The frequency planning isnot excessively constrained and a significant capacity may be obtained,even in the initial deployment. Over time, through its APNT alternativepositioning, navigation and timing functionality, the enhanced LDACSsystem may render DME/TACAN and VOR (VHF Omni-directional Range systems)obsolete. Eventually, these legacy systems may be decommissioned and asa result, much more spectrum will become available for the enhancedLDACS system deployment, and over time, the capacity of the enhancedLDACS system will become quite large. It should be understood that thedemand for air-to-ground and ground-to-air communications is notgeographically uniform, and therefore, it may not be necessary to deploythe same number of channels at each ground station. The ground stationsalong flight corridors may use more LDACS channels, while groundstations away from major flight routes may use fewer channels. Forexample, a site in North Dakota may serve all of its demand using onlytwo LDACS channels. At the same time, a site in the northeast area ofthe country may deploy five or even more channels. This is not unusual.The non-uniform geographical distribution of traffic demand is a commonoccurrence in day-to-day cellular engineering practice.

Additionally, because the demand for air-to-ground and ground-to-aircommunications is not equal, traffic in the ground-to-air direction mayexceed the air-to-ground traffic by a significant factor. For thatreason, the number of channels does not have to be the same in theair-to-ground and ground-to-air direction. In the existing spectrumallocation, the current LDACS specification makes allowance for 86channels in air-to-ground direction and 91 channels in ground-to-airdirection. As more spectrum is reclaimed from the legacy systems in thefuture, this spectrum may be used for additional ground-to-airsupplemental channels. One possible issue is that the static channelassignment may have drawbacks from a well-known problem of trunkinginefficiency. The capacity planning is performed so that the LDACSground stations have enough resources during their busiest hours. Achannel that is assigned to a ground station cell in a low demand areamay not be used. When there is a fixed assignment, that channel cannotbe assigned elsewhere.

Channel Aggregation with a Dynamic Channel Assignment

In dynamic channel assignment, frequencies are pre-assigned only to thefundamental channels, and therefore, there is one fixed frequency percell. The assignment of the frequencies to supplemental channels,however, may be performed dynamically and on the basis of the feedbackthat a ground station receives from an aircraft within its coveragearea. By accomplishing the assignment in a dynamic fashion, the channelaggregation system avoids trunking inefficiency problems associated withfixed channel assignment. In a dynamic assignment, a higher capacity isautomatically provisioned in those areas where the demand is higher.

A prediction of the number of available channels that may be assigned ina dynamic fashion at any given location is shown in FIGS. 32, 33, and34, showing in FIG. 32 a map of CONUS at 570 and the number of freeLDACS channels for dynamic assignment. Adjacent channel assignmentbetween LDACS and DME/TACAN is not allowed and a histogram (FIG. 33) andgraph (FIG. 34) of the free LDACS channels is shown. The predictionconsiders the interference between a nominal LDACS system and anexisting DME/TACAN installation. Only those channels that are currentlyavailable for LDACS are considered. The link budget parameters areprovided in the table entitled System Parameters Used for Prediction ofGround-to-Air Data Rate. The simulations assume the aircraft altitude of35,000 feet. This table is reproduced below:

TABLE 4A System Parameters Used for Prediction of Ground-to-Air DataRate Parameter Value Comment EiRP (dBm) 49 Maximum allowed by standardis 52 dBm. Aircraft antenna gain 3 (dB) Receiver cable losses 2 (dB)Noise figure of the RX 6 (dB) Fade margin (dB) 6 Implementation margin 3Implementation margin specifies (dB) how far from the Shannon limitsystems ACM operate. The 3 dB value use here is quite conservative.Propagation model FSPL Free Space Path Loss

The histogram and graph of FIGS. 33 and 34 illustrate dynamic assignmentbut assume restrictive conditions on no adjacent channels assignmentbetween DME/TACAN and LDACS. Even in this scenario, there are at least11 LDACS channels available. In some parts of the country, this numbermay be as high as 69 channels.

The conditions for no adjacent channel assignment may be conservative.The enhanced LDACS system may operate on channels that are adjacent toDME/TACAN. The adjacent channel assignment may result in a very smalllevel of cross-system interference, which may be tolerated by both LDACSand DME/TACAN as noted in the article by Epple et al. entitled,“Overview of Legacy Systems in L-Band and its Influence on the FutureAeronautical Communication System LDACS1” (2011), which is herebyincorporated by reference in its entirety.

The CONUS map shown in FIG. 35 at 580 and histograms and graphs of FIGS.36 and 37 are generated under assumption that the adjacent channelsassignment is allowed. It is evident that if a small amount ofinterference could be tolerated, there may be a substantial increase inthe system capacity, e.g., in some locations more than three times.However, it is not likely that such a high capacity would be needed foran initial deployment, which may be driven primarily by the ATC, AOC andAPNT services, which have low data rate requirements.

Referring now to the CONUS map of FIG. 38 at 590 and histogram andgraphs of FIGS. 39 and 40, the maximum possible data rate of theenhanced LDACS system is illustrated. The simulations assume aggregationof all free channels. Adjacent channel assignment between LDACS andDME/TACAN is not permitted in this example. This can be compared to theexample presented with the CONUS map of FIG. 41 at 600 and the graphsand bar chart of FIGS. 42 and 43 when the adjacent channel assignment isallowed. If the adjacent channel assignment is restricted, theachievable throughput is over 13 Mbps over the entire country with morethan 50% of the country having data rates above 30 Mbps. This is farabove what is available to the ATC and AOC at the current time. Allowingthe assignment of the adjacent channels will achieve data rates above 63Mbps, which is a rate that provides sufficient capacity to accommodategeneral IP connectivity and data transmission of flying aircraft. Theseresults even assume no decommissioning of the DME/TACAN sites. IfDME/TACAN sites are decommissioned, the available data rates will growabove the numbers presented in the bar charts and graphs of FIGS. 38-40and 41-43.

It may not be realistic to aggregate all possible channels because theamount of required signal processing may be prohibitively high.Referring to the CONUS map of FIG. 44 at 610 and histogram and graph ofFIGS. 45 and 46, there are shown the data rates that could be achievedunder the assumption of an eight channel aggregation. When the channelsare aggregated, the same results are obtained regardless whether LDACSand DME/TACAN are allowed to use adjacent channels, which is evidentfrom FIGS. 45 and 46. At any given location within the CONUS, there maybe at least 11 channels that are available for an interference freeassignment. Therefore, eight channels may be available. From the barchart and graph of FIGS. 45 and 46, it is evident that the enhancedLDACS system may provide a coast-to-coast data rate of 20 Mbps. Moredetailed analysis of the receiver processing requirements may benecessary to obtain a more justifiable number. It should be understoodthat adjacent assignment results in a very small level of cross-systeminterference that may be tolerated easily by both LDACS and DME/TACAN.

An example migration/implementation strategy for the channel aggregationused by the enhanced LDACS system is outlined in the table below:

TABLE 5 Example Migration Strategy Step # Step Comment 1 Dual modeLDACS- Initial deployment is a coverage DME/TACAN with deployment.Ground stations could single fixed be deployed starting from highchannel congestion area until national assignment coverage is reached.The network is frequency planned with fixed assignment. There is asingle channel per cell. Frequency plan avoids adjacent channelassignment between LDACS and DME/TACAN. An aircraft radio needs to bedeveloped that supports both DME/TACAN and LDACS. The radio could beusing LDACS positioning capability to provide DME/TACAN messages. Thisway in areas where LDACS is deployed, the aircraft is completelyindependent of DME/TACAN network. This reduces the utilization of theDME/TACAN and hence, the overall interference in the band is reduced aswell. In this stage, the use of LDACS is for ATC, AOC and APNT services.2 Dual mode (LDACS- Channel aggregation feature is DME/TACAN) withimplemented in dual mode radios. channel Channel aggregation allowshigher aggregation data rates and hence enables general IP connectivityservices. Adjacent channel assignment should still be avoided. 3 Dualmode LDACS- The radio becomes more robust so DME/TACAN with that it maytolerate adjacent channel channel assignment. There is a aggregation andnational wideband coverage on adjacent channel LDACS, and only legacyaircraft are assignment still using DME/TACAN. 4 Single mode LDACSDME/TACAN is decommissioned and all with channel aircraft are on LDACS.aggregation

LDACS Channel Aggregation with Cloud-Based Radio Resource Management

Due to LDACS system's relatively small channel bandwidth, carrieraggregation achieves high system capacity, where multiple LDACS channelsare bonded together in the enhanced LDACS system in a single data pipebetween flying aircraft and LDACS ground station. Because each channelrequires a separate frequency, frequency planning is used. Twoapproaches to frequency planning include: 1) the static frequencyplanning where all LDACS channels are preconfigured with frequencies,which is an approach similar to FDMA (or FDMA/TDMA) type cellularsystems, e.g., IS-136, TDMA, iDEN and similar systems, and 2) theassignment of dynamic channel frequencies.

In the dynamic approach, only one channel per cell has a fixedassignment, which is the fundamental channel. The remaining channels arereferred to as the supplemental channels, which are assigned frequenciesbased on energy or spectrum measurements provided by the receiver of theflying aircraft. This second dynamic approach allows higher LDACS systemcapacity because it avoids trunking inefficiency, which is a fundamentalproblem of all cellular systems using fixed frequency assignments. Thissystem, however, is inherently reactive because it depends on feedbackfrom flying aircraft to manage frequencies. Also, in its management ofradio resource assignment, such system is local in nature because eachradio resource management entity is located at the cell level and hasvisibility only of those cells in its immediate neighborhood.

Because the air traffic is highly predictable, much information isreadily available: (1) number of flying aircraft; (2) flying routes ofeach aircraft; (3) type and passenger capacity for each aircraft; (4)historical data on communication needs for each aircraft, includingvolume and type of communication; and (5) weather patterns and changesof flying routes that are due to the changes in weather.

Based upon this information, the enhanced LDACS system is able topredict the capacity requirements for each LDACS cell and its groundstations. This prediction may not only consider historical trends, butalso, consider the air traffic situation as it presents itself at anygiven time. Since the number of aircraft is essentially constant, thesituation awareness becomes an important factor as suggested by thefollowing example.

In this example, bad weather in the southeast of CONUS may causetemporary traffic congestion around Atlanta's airport creating a higherdemand for capacity in that region. The same aircraft that are flyingaround Atlanta are not flying around Los Angeles. Therefore, while thereis an elevated demand around Atlanta, there is a reduced demand aroundLos Angeles.

An intelligent enhanced LDACS system that manages radio resources andhas a knowledge of CONUS based demand may seamlessly “migrate” theexcess capacity from the Los Angeles area to the Atlanta areas. Theenhanced LDACS system provides this capability with the Cloud BasedResource Management (CBRR) entity. Referring now to FIG. 47, there isillustrated an example of the CBRR 620 and showing seven different LDACcells labeled L1 to L7, which are not equally loaded. Different aircraft622 are shown flying in different cells. Cell L2 has the highesttraffic, while cells L1 and L7 have no aircraft within their servicearea. Based on the dynamic approach outlined above, Cell L7 may try toborrow some frequencies from surrounding cells. Surrounding cells L3 andL4, however, are already substantially loaded and as a result, anattempt may be made to borrow channels from cell L1. This borrowingcould temporarily alleviate congestion in cell L2, but it is likely tocause additional trouble some time later as most of the planes that arecausing congestion to cell L2 are moving towards cell L1.

With CBRR management in the enhanced LDACS system, communication linksexist between all LDACS cells and the network cloud that may include theCBRR cloud-based management 620. Through these links, the CBRRmanagement entity is informed about current traffic served by each cell.Because the CBRR management entity 620 is aware of each cell'sconfiguration, it may determine how much traffic loading occurs on eachcell. The management entity 620 is also aware of the trajectory for eachplane and may predict what will be the demand placed on each cell in thenear future. In this example in FIG. 47, the CBRR management entity 620may decide not to take channel capacity from cell L1 because it is onthe average having high demand. However, cells L7 and L6 are lightlyloaded, and there will be no demand in those cells for some time.Therefore, the frequencies from cells L6 and L7 may be migrated to cellL2 as shown with the illustrated channel borrowing lines 624, and lateron to cell L1 to support the elevated traffic demand that will occur asaircraft moves from cell L2 and cell L3 and passes into cell L1.

This example shows there are advantages to the use of the CBRRmanagement entity 620 because the capacity of the LDACS system becomes aflexible resource that may be optimized to follow the traffic demandacross CONUS. Any idle resources are minimized and the availablethroughput is the largest in those cells where it is needed the most.

To accommodate this CBRR approach in the enhanced LDACS system, eachcell may include a bank of radios that is sufficient to accommodate thecell's peak demand. At any given moment, only a fraction of these radiosmay be active, i.e., have a frequency assignment. For example, afterchannel borrowing, cell L7 in FIG. 47 may be left with only one radiooperating on its fundamental channel and the remaining radios may bewithout assignment. This is acceptable because there is no trafficdemand in Cell L7.

The CBRR management entity 620 may be configured as a boundary betweenthe enhanced LDACS system and its network and the Internet. Therefore,it becomes a single point that needs to be secured. In cases of cyberbased danger, the entire network could be separated from the Internetand reduced to its primary functionality, e.g., ATC, AOC and APNT. TheCBRR management entity has ability to easily accommodate the followingfeatures: (1) prioritization of traffic type, e.g., ATC vs. user-basedInternet traffic; (2) prioritization of aircraft such as customer tiers;(3) flexible time and geographic billing, which allows different ratesbased on time of the day and geographical location; (4) Service LevelAgreement (SLA) based on capacity/resource pre-allocation; and (5) userexperience management.

The CBRR management entity 620 may include an LDACS Management EntityController (LMEC) that sits above the LME to configure and controlresources across all enhanced LDACS ground station connections and withother ground stations in the enhanced LDACS system. It may operate fordynamic resource allocation and internally allocate and deallocate basedon the aircraft station requirements. It may include an externalinterface that operates to allow cloud-based resource sharing or similarfunctions. It may determine which channels should be assigned to whichaircraft station. The LMEC may interface with a ground stationcontroller to determine which channels are in use and which channels areavailable for assignment. As a potential addition to the enhanced LDACSsystem, it may allow channel estimation symbols. The aircraft stationmay transmit symbols back to the ground station when requested for theground station to determine the channel characteristics. In an OPENstate, the LMEC may allow the ground station to reuse sub-channelresources for additional aircraft stations.

The ground station controller overseas Type II handovers and will havedata about needing to know which channels are in use in an arearequiring the LMEC to interface with it in order to appropriatelyallocate channels for dynamic resource management. The LMEC will requestresources as channels from the ground station controller, which in turn,will rescind resources from the LMEC if needed for the overallapplication. The LMEC is originally allowed to expand a channel, but newaircraft stations are entering a neighboring ground station cell andresources will need to be reallocated.

The channel estimation symbols as noted before are a potential additionto the enhanced LDACS system and when requested, the aircraft stationperforms channel estimation calculations based upon channel estimationsymbols from the ground station to determine channel quality. It ispossible that pilot symbols may be used. The LMEC receives data fromeach ground station per aircraft station communications link, includinga channel quality indicator, precise timing advance, modulation schemeand coding scheme. The aircraft station will be able to demodulate anddecode the transmitted downlink data with the maximum error rate.

Reference is again made to the description regarding the state diagram384 of FIG. 13 and the open state 340 where instead of constantlytransmitting the keep alive message, the aircraft station willincorporate in a random-access channel (RACH) as a shared channel whenthe aircraft station needs to transmit data and will listen to theground station to determine if the ground station needs to transmit datato it. The aircraft station may use the random-access channel and checkwith the ground station after the expiration of a new timer. As anexample will be the T321T timer in the LTE system. Paging may be usedand the STAY_ALIVE message may overload or create new paging messages.On the ground station to aircraft station communications link, it ispossible to indicate the data to send as containing one or more aircraftstation SAC messages. It is possible to read purpose and remove the KEEPALIVE timer on the aircraft to ground station communications link.Different areas can be paged, such as the last seen ground station andadjacent ground stations when the cell size is quite large. An aircraftstation could have migrated to the next ground station and the originalground station may never receive the CELL EXIT message. On a newregistration, the ground station controller should be aware of the newserving ground station.

Combined LDACS-LTE Architecture

Referring now to FIG. 48, a representation of the LDACS architecturethat may be used with the enhanced LDACS system and is derived from theLDACS standards is illustrated and shows the Aircraft Station side 630and Ground Station side 632. The LDACS standards do not currently expandupon the applications, such as the voice, data and control applications,also referred to as “services” as shown in FIG. 48. Instead, the currentLDACS standards to date have focused on defining the MAC and PHYelements necessary to provide the connection and logical communicationchannels between the architectural elements for both the AircraftStation side 630 and Ground Station side 632 as the respective VoiceInterface (VI) 630 a,632 b, Data Link Service (DLS) 630 b,632 b, LDACSManagement Entity (LME) 630 c,632 c, and Medium Access Control (MAC) 630d,632 d. The “Medium Access Controller” is a functional layer of theLDACS waveform that interfaces the PHY and provides the connectionmapping into the logical transport channels that are transmitted andreceived by the PHY. The Medium Access Control 630 d,632 d is anarchitectural element that is responsible for managing the connectionbetween the ground station 632 and aircraft station 630.

The architecture captured in the LDACS specifications is similar in manyways to the IEEE 802.11 standards, which provide a universal access datacentric technology. The 802.11 standards are generally used forconnections that are generally localized and used in static deploymentscenarios and lacks key mobility features such as protocols for verywide area network location tracking and seamless site-to site handoversthat are needed for a wide-scale network deployment of and LDACS-basedsystem for command, control and communications.

The system air-to-ground (ATG) network technology includes features thatare common in modern cellular protocols and the enhanced LDACS systemarchitecture marries the LDACS waveform and modern cellular technologiesto provide the following benefits: (1) maintain compatibility with thecurrent and foreseen LDACS standards and interfaces; (2) add support forA-PNT (alternative positioning and timing) and other navigationalfeatures; (3) provide for secure authenticated network access; (4)provide security and privacy encryption; (5) enhance handover support;and (6) enable network segregation and mobility.

Referring now to FIG. 49, an example of the enhanced LDACS systemarchitecture is shown generally at 650 that yields these benefits isillustrated. At the highest level, the ground station and aircraftstation support the upper layers of the LTE protocol stacks and customelements and support network mobility and A-PNT features.

The enhancements to the base LDACS waveform on the ground station sideincludes support for additional broadcast messaging. The standard LDACSForward Link broadcast signaling is enhanced to include advertising of anetwork provider code and neighbor cell information that allows theaircraft station to verify that the network provider is provisioned toreduce the burden on the aircraft station for finding neighboring groundstation signals for handover and reselection. In addition, the broadcastmessages are enhanced to advertise the precise geographic coordinates ofthe ground station. This information can be used by an aircraft stationto determine its location with high accuracy. The broadcast messageadditions require expansion of the LDACS Management Entity (LME) portionor the ground station architecture.

As illustrated in FIG. 49, the enhanced LDACS system architecture 650includes the application service example 652, enhanced aircraft station(EAS) 654, the enhanced ground station (EGS) 656, the enhanced packetcore (EPC) 658, and the application service example 660. The applicationservice examples include the ATC services 652 a, voice services 652 b,data services 652 c, and AP&T as alternate pointing and trackingservices 652 d. The enhanced aircraft station 654 includes an LTE UEdata plain protocol stack 654 a, LTE UE control plain protocol stack 654b, the enhanced aircraft station (EAS) controller 654 c, and the stackedadaptation module 654 d. These interact with the voice interface (VI)654 e, data link service (DLS) 654 f, LDACS management entity (LME) 654g, and medium access control (MAC) 654 h. The enhanced ground station656 includes the voice interface (VI) 656 a, data link service (DLS) 656b, LDACS management entity (LME) 656 c, and medium access control (MAC)656 d. The EGS controller 656 e is illustrated and communicates withstacked adaptation 656 f. The enhanced packet core 658 includes the S-GW658 a, P-GW 658 b, MME 658 c, and HSS 658 d. The application serviceexample 660 includes similar services as the application service example652 and includes the ATC services 660 a, voice services 660 b, dataservices 660 c, and AP&T services 660 d. A network management system 662is illustrated in BSS 662 a and OSS 662 b.

Beyond this broadcast message expansion, the ground station is enhancedwith dynamic resource allocation based on demand and aircraft stationsubscriber priority. These features exist in the LTE currently, but thecontemporary LDACS standards have no allowance for this functionality.The conventional LDACS approach in the standards is to allocate apercentage of the ground station's bandwidth to each aircraft stationthat attaches, whether there is or is not data to transfer at that time.The enhanced ground station 656 as part of the enhanced LDACS system, onthe other hand, implements dynamic resource allocation using similarschemes to those used in cellular technologies. Based on the demand, thedata channel resources of the ground station are allocated to theaircraft station or any requesting aircraft station. This support fordynamic resource allocation necessitates additional enhancement of theLME.

The enhanced ground station 656 as part of the enhanced LDACS systemincludes a protocol stack adaption layer 656 f that provides theinterface and protocol conversion between the LDACS MAC 656 d and theLTE core Network (enhanced Packet Core or EPC) 658. This protocol stackadaption layer 656 f is a primary architectural feature that allows theLTE features and functions to map into the LDACS waveform. In order tomaintain compatibility with the standard LDACS waveform, the enhancedLDACS system uses the LDACS Data Link Services (DLS) 654 f,656 b as atransport for the LTE core network traffic. This maps the mobilitymanagement (MME) 658 c traffic and the user application plane trafficover the standard LDACS DLS data connection with the aircraft station.The protocol stack adaption layer 656 f manipulates the data trafficfrom the LTE enhanced packet core through the Data Link Services 656 b.In effect, the LDACS Data Link Services is unaware of the LTE trafficflows.

At the enhanced aircraft station 654 operating in the enhanced LDACSsystem, a mirrored approach expands the standard LDACS of the aircraftstation. The aircraft station enhances the base the LME reads andinterprets the additional broadcast messages. On top of enhancements tothe aircraft station LME, the enhanced aircraft station incorporates theLTE User Equipment (UE) protocol stack. The network provideridentifiers, neighbor ground station information and ground stationlocation information are passed to the enhanced aircraft stationcontroller and the LTE UE protocol stack. As in the enhanced groundstation 656 where the LTE core network as the enhanced packet core (EPC)protocol stack is used, the enhanced aircraft station leverages theaircraft station DLS to allow the LTE UE protocol stack to communicateusing the LDACS data resources.

The protocol stack communication as can be modified for the enhancedLDACS system architecture as described is shown at FIGS. 50, 51 and 52.As illustrated in FIG. 50, the enhanced LDACS control plane protocolstack is illustrated at 654 b where the MAC and PHY layers are replacedwith the LDACS. Similarly, the system enhanced LDACS data plane protocolstack 654 a is shown at FIG. 51 and shows the MAC and PHY replaced withthe LDACS. FIG. 52 shows the enhanced aircraft station 654 incommunication with two enhanced ground stations 656 that communicatewith the core network as the enhanced packet core 658 for allowing thehandover. The enhanced aircraft station 654 includes the LDACS MAC 654 iand PHY 654 j layers that communicate with the stack adaptation 654 dand the LTE UE control plane protocol stack 654 b and LTE UE data planeprotocol stack 654 a. Similarly, the enhanced ground stations 656include MAC 656 i and PHY 656 j and communicate via the stack adaption656 f with the enhanced packet core 658 as part of the core network thatincludes the MME (Mobility Management Entity) 658 c, HSS (HomeSubscriber Server) 658 d, the S-GW (Serving Gateway) 658 b, and P-GW(Packet Data Network Gateway) 658 a. These modules may operate as partof system architecture evolution (SAE) for the 3G PP's LTE wirelesscommunication standard.

Combined LDACS-LTE and UAS-Pass Off to LTE Network

The LTE protocols may be implemented on the LDACS PHY/MAC as notedbefore and provide security in order to prevent undesired commandeeringor eavesdropping on UAS traffic. As explained in greater detail below,certain areas are more likely to have an increased UAS presence, such aslarger metropolitan areas. Adding additional LDACS ground stations inthese areas, along with LTE handovers, can be better suited to meetdemand and capacity. There may be options for multi-provider. A deliveryservice, for example, may use UAS systems and may set up individualLDACS networks to handle their fleets of UAS. These UAS's, e.g., drones,may need to recognize what provider they should be attached to and whatservices they have on roaming providers.

The conventional commercial cellular technologies deliver excellentbandwidth to a large number of subscribers, but still have shortcomingsfor long range air-to ground connectivity. The modern cellulartechnologies have a frequency reuse factor of 1 because the same RFchannel is used by several base stations simultaneously. The cellularstandards employ advanced signal processing techniques to enable signaldifferentiation and separation of the multiple base station signals andare optimized for cellular devices that are distributed throughout theground within the area of coverage. There is differentiation of alimited number of base station signals, which works because a cellulardevice on the ground can only “hear” a limited number of base stationsbecause of RF propagation limitations due to terrain and obstacles,e.g., buildings, and the spacing of the deployed network base stations.

When a cellular device is airborne at a reasonable height above theground, the RF propagation is not as limited by the terrain orbuildings. As a cellular receiver rises in altitude, the number of basestation signals it may receive increases. In many cases, the signalprocessing techniques currently employed cannot provide thedifferentiation needed to reliably connect with a base station. If thecellular device is able to connect with a base station, when thecellular device transmits to the base station, its signal propagates tomany base stations and not just the local base station. Due to the reusefactor of 1, the cellular device's transmitted signal becomesinterference to the surrounding base stations. If there are asignificant number of cellular devices present as the control andcommand link for a fleet of unmanned aerial systems (UASs), theinterference created by the UASs transmitting to these base stations mayimpact the performance of the cellular network. These drawbacks increaseas the altitude of the cellular device increases. At ground level andlower altitudes, there is little to no impact to either side of thecommunications link.

Air-to-ground specific waveforms, however, such as LDACS, do not sufferthe same limitations as the cellular technologies because they weredesigned to be used with much greater separation between ground stationsand the aircraft station at altitudes consistent with flight. Inaddition, air-to-ground waveforms, like LDACS, employ a differentchannelization strategy and lower frequency reuse factors to mitigateinterference from the airborne transmit signal. With expected UAS usagefor applications such as home delivery, however, near-groundconnectivity is necessary for safety of operation and UAS command andcontrol, thus requiring near-ground level coverage for low altitude UAS.

The financial and practical challenges of deploying a network based onthe LDACS waveform may be prohibitive, and for that reason, the solutionlies in a hybrid approach that leverages both the commercial cellularnetwork connectivity and a dedicated air-to-ground LDACS network. Theair-to-ground network may provide connectivity when the UAS is above analtitude, for example, 300 feet above ground level. Below that altitude,the UAS may connect to a commercial cellular carrier for the finalapproach to a delivery address and the subsequent departure.

The UAS connects to both networks, which may be achieved via areconfigurable radio device or using two distinct radios. In eithercase, due to the criticality of the command and control link for theUAS, a make-before-break handover between the upper layer air-to-groundnetwork and the commercial cellular network is employed. This type ofhandover is known for allowing the channel in the source cell to beretained and used in parallel with the channel in the target cell, i.e.,in this case, the commercial cellular network as the target cell.Connection to the cellular network is established before the LDACSconnection is broken.

Referring now to FIG. 53, there is illustrated the enhanced LDACS systemgenerally at 670 and a number of UAV's as drones 672, some flying athigh altitudes and commanded and controlled via the enhanced LDACSsystem network, and a number of other drones making deliveries andoperating at a lower altitude below 300 feet in this example, andoperating for command and control via the cellular LTE network. It ispossible for a drone 672 to establish a make-before-break handoverbetween the enhanced LDACS system 670 and commercial cellular network678. The aircraft station 674 communicates with the ground station 676and may communicate with drones 672.

Some remote areas of the country have sparse cellular coverage and mayhave no LTE coverage at all. Even if there is coverage, it may not beubiquitous, and for that reason, the enhanced LDACS system may include atri-band option for an assured command and control link withLDACS/LTE/SatComm (Satellite Communications). There may still becontinuous monitoring and redundant connection solution that ensuresthat the command and control link to the new connection before releasingthe last connection. The enhanced LDACS system 670 of FIG. 53 mayinclude a tri-band option with a satellite link and a drone with anumber of different antenna and radios for this function.

Link Budget and Coverage Planning

A version of a link budget for deployment with reference to FIG. 14, forexample, of the larger LDACS-u macro-cells has been described. It hasbeen demonstrated that within limitations given within the conventionalLDACS standard, nominal cell radii may easily extend up to 200 nauticalmiles. In the example of the macro LDACS-o cells, this coverage may beachieved. To prevent excessive intra-system interference, the power onboth the aircraft station, such as a drone, and the base station shouldbe significantly reduced. A version of link budget where both aircraftstation and base station operate with 1 watt, e.g., about 30 dBm, ofconductive power is presented in Table 6, showing the results of theground-to-air (G2A) link and air-to-ground (A2G) link. With 30 dBm ofconductive power, the enhanced LDACS system may achieve coverage ofabout 10 km with a significant fade margin.

There are several aspects of the link budget. L-band propagation lossesare relatively low when compared with 2.4 GHz ISM or even PCS (PersonalCommunications Service) band deployments. As a result, the coverageobjectives may be achieved, taking into account the higher transmitpowers that may result in elevated intra-system interference. Addressingthis issue solely through cell placement may be difficult due to pathloss variability within an urban environment. Therefore, the enhancedLDACS system may implement a fast transmit power control mechanism witha significant dynamic range.

Additionally, any selected antennas may have low selectivity, whichallows for a full tri-dimensional coverage of the various LDACS cells.This may create additional complexities when it comes to intra-systeminterference management, and it is possible to implement some form ofbeam forming or MIMO.

TABLE 6 Link Budget for LDACS Overlay Cells G2A A2G Parameter LinkParameter Link PA Power (dBm) 30 PA Power (dBm) 30 Cable loss (dB) −2Cable loss (dB) −2 BS Antenna gain (dB) 3 AS Antenna gain (dB) 3 EiRP(dBm) 31 EiRP (dBm) 31 Fade margin (dB) −14 Fade margin (dB) −14 ASantenna gain (dB) 3 BS antenna gain (dB) 3 Cable loss (dB) −2 Cable loss(dB) −2 RX Sensitivity (dBm) −95 RX Sensitivity (dBm) −95 Max path loss(dB) 113 Max path loss (dB) 113 Nominal cell radius 10.67 Nominal cellradius 10.67 (km) (km)

Inter-System Interference Condition

Referring to again and as shown in FIG. 14, there are three concurrentsystems illustrated by the DME/TACAN 402, LDACS underlay 404, and LDACSoverlay 406 operating within the same geographical region and sharingthe same time/frequency space. Therefore, there are six interferencescenarios that are managed using frequency planning. At this time, it isassumed that DME/TACAN 402 and LDACS-u 404 are planned in a manner asdescribed above. LDACS-o 406 as microcells are planned after DME/TACAN402 and LDACS-u 404 are already deployed. An example planning sequenceis as follows:

1) DME/TACAN systems 402 are frequency planned in a manner unrestrictedby deployment of LDACS.

2) LDACS-u 404 is frequency planned with a “no-interference” constrainttowards DME/TACAN 402. LDACS-u 404 is deployed with a single channel persite. The LDACS-u 404 provides coverage of the CONUS and possibly analternate positioning system.

3) LDACS-o 406 is frequency planned to cause no interference to eitherDME/TACAN 402 or LDACS-u 404.

The interference constraints between LDACS-u 404 and DME/TACAN 402 areexplained above. The interference constraints between LDACS-o 406 andDME/TACAN 402, and between LDACS-o and LDACS-u 404 are now explained ingreater detail.

Interference Constraints Between LDACS-o and DME/TACAN

Referring now to FIG. 54, a potential interference between LDACS-o 406and DME/TACAN 402 is illustrated generally at 690 and showing aircraft692 a-d. The two systems are deployed in a cross-duplex configuration.As a result, base station transmissions in one system may causeinterference with base station reception in the other system. Likewise,the aircraft transmission in one system interferes with aircraftreception in the other system. The forward link 694 and reverse link 696channels are illustrated. As shown in FIG. 54, there are fourinterference examples illustrated as cases in this example. They aredescribed below.

Example 1

The transmissions from an LDACS-o 406 base station may causeinterference to the base station reception on the DME/TACAN system 402.To prevent this interference, the LDACS-o 406 base station transmissionmay be separated in frequency domain from the DME/TACAN 402 receptionchannel. This separation is a function of the distance between theLDACS-o 406 and DME/TACAN 402 base stations. For a nominal analysis,this document adopts separation requirements as presented in Table 7.The values in Table 7 are nominal and based on preliminaryspecifications of LDACS's emission spectral mask as noted in the text ofthe Proposed Amendment to the International Standards and RecommendedPractices, Annex 10, Aeronautical Telecommunications 2019 (hereinafter“Proposed Amendment”), the disclosure which is hereby incorporated byreference in its entirety. The values in Table 7 may be verified moreaccurately with further experimentation. Also, the separationrequirements depend on radiated signal center lines of both LDACS-o 406and DME/TACAN 402 sites, and thus, separation may be subject tosite-by-site planning.

TABLE 7 Channel Separation Requirements Between LDACS-o Base StationTransmission and DME/TACAN Reception Distance between LDACS-o Frequencyseparation and DME/TACAN BS (km) requirements (LDACS channels) <10 3Between 10 and 20 2 Between 20 and 40 1 >40 0

Example 2

In this example also shown as Case 2 in FIG. 54, a transmission fromLDACS-o 692 a aircraft station may interfere with reception of theDME/TACAN aircraft 692 b using that system. To prevent thisinterference, LDACS-o cell 406 should not be co-channeled in theair-to-ground direction with any DME/TACAN 402 ground-to-air signalswithin a two RHz40k distance. The RHz40k distance in an exampleindicates radio horizon for an aircraft at the highest cruising altitudeof 40,000 feet. This distance may be estimated as:

${RHz} = {{RE} \times {{asin}\left( \frac{\left\lbrack {\left( {{RE} + {hA}} \right)^{2} - {RE}^{2}} \right\rbrack^{1\text{/}2}}{{RE} + {hA}} \right)}}$

Where

RHz—radio horizon of a flying aircraft at altitude hA

RE—radius of the earth (6378.14 km)

hA—altitude of the aircraft

Substituting hA=40,000 feet (i.e., 12.2 km), one obtains:

RHz40k=394 km

Example 3

In this example also referred to as Case 3 in FIG. 54, transmissionsfrom a DME/TACAN base station 402 may interfere with reception ofLDACS-o 406 base station. This interference case is very similar toExample 1. To prevent this interference, the LDACS-o 406 base stationreception may be separated in frequency domain from the DME/TACAN 402transmission channel. The separation requirements provided in Table 7may be reused. This may not be completely justified as the transmissionpower of the DME/TACAN 402 is much higher than the transmission power ofthe LADACS-o 406 base station. Further investigation and confirmation ofthe numbers in Table 7 may be warranted when practical performancecharacteristics of the equipment become available.

Example 4

In this example also referred to as Case 4 in FIG. 54, interference mayexist between DME/TACAN aircraft 692 d and the reception between LDACS-oaircraft 692 c. To prevent this interference, the LDACS-o cell 406should not be co-channeled in the ground-to-air direction with anyDME/TACAN air-to-ground within two RHz40k distance. This distance iscalculated in the Proposed Amendment as 394 km in this example.

Interference Constraints Between LDACS-o and LDACS-u

The interference between LDACS-o 406 and LDACS-u 404 use the samechannels and in the same duplex configuration. The interference betweenthese sites is similar to intra-system frequency reuse interference,which is described above.

An example deployment of the enhanced LDACS system is shown in theaerial satellite map of FIG. 55 within the greater metropolitan area ofOrlando, Fla. shown generally at 700. The intended coverage area isbounded by the circle 702 shown on the satellite map. This circle has aradius of about 20 km and it covers area of about 1250 squarekilometers.

In this satellite image 700 of FIG. 55, the Center Latitude is 28.534783deg. The Center Longitude is −81.380188 deg. The radius is about 20 kmand the bound area is about 1250 km². The coverage cities includeOrlando, Altamonte Springs, Winter Park, Pine Hills, Oak Ridge, DoctorPhillips, University Park, and Ocoee, all located in central Florida.

The explanation now follows with a first section that addresses coverageand a second section that addresses frequency planning.

The coverage design is based on the link budget shown in Table 8. Thecell radii of the LDACS-o 406 cells are set to about 10 km. This gives acell separation of about 17 km. A cell placement based on the nominalradius of 10 km is presented in the graph of FIG. 56 and there are about7 cells in the design indicated by the 7 asterisks 706. The coverageprediction plot associated with the design shown in FIG. 56 is shown inFIG. 57 and the altitude of the aircraft is about 500 meters (1,640feet), which is appropriate for unmanned flying systems. The coveragearea is large and may extend past the major coverage area shown in FIG.50 because of the favorable propagation conditions of the L-band. Thedifferent coverage predictions are identified on the route withalphabetic labels A-F.

TABLE 8 Link Budget Overlay for LDACS-o System in the Orlando, FloridaArea (FIG. 55) G2A A2G Parameter Link Parameter Link PA Power (dBm) 30PA Power (dBm) 30 Cable loss (dB) −2 Cable loss (dB) −2 BS Antenna gain(dB) 3 AS Antenna gain (dB) 3 EiRP (dBm) 31 EiRP (dBm) 31 Fade margin(dB) −14 Fade margin (dB) −14 AS antenna gain (dB) 3 BS antenna gain(dB) 3 Cable loss (dB) −2 Cable loss (dB) −2 RX Sensitivity (dBm) −95 RXSensitivity (dBm) −95 Max path loss (dB) 113 Max path loss (dB) 113Nominal cell radius 10.67 Nominal cell radius 10.67 (km) (km)

Frequency Plan

Deployment of the three systems is illustrated in FIG. 58. The smallcircles 710 represent the LDACS-u, the small dots 714 represent theDME/TACAN, and the asterisks represent the LDACS-o sites 718. There is agreater difference in density between LDACS-u 710, DME/TACAN 714 andLDACS-o 718. The density of LDACS-o 718 is much higher. Per design,LDACS-o 718 covers localized, small areas and at altitudes that are wellbelow cruising altitudes of commercial aircraft.

An Automatic Frequency Planning (AFP) algorithm was developed to performthe frequency assignment to LDACS-o cells 718. The result of theassignment for the Orlando overlay is shown in FIG. 59 with thedifferent overlay cells 718 shown as dots. In this plan, the algorithmsuccessfully found a set of non-interfering channels for the overlaysystem. A single channel per site is assigned. It may be demonstratedthat in this case, the frequency problem is not constrained and severalchannels may be found for the overlay cells 718 and form an overlaysystem having substantial capacity. This system may be used for command,control and communication with unmanned airborne systems, i.e., drones.

The enhanced LDACS system as described may operate as a two-tier LDACSsystem, which includes the LDACS-u 710 and LDACS-o sites 718. TheLDACS-u 710 are the underlay sites, which provide coast-to-coastcoverage at aircraft cruising altitudes, i.e., above 18,000 feet, andthe LDACS-o 718 are the overlay sites that operate at the loweraltitudes, e.g., less than 1,500 feet in an example, and over smallergeographical areas. A typical deployment of a number of LDACS-o sitesmay serve a metropolitan area, such as the illustrated Orlando, Fla.area shown in the satellite image of FIG. 55, and is used for command,control and communication with unmanned aerial systems. The LDACS-usites 710 cover the entire CONUS and the LDACS-o sites 718 providecoverage for the illustrated greater Orlando area in the example asdescribed. Both systems meet the necessary coverage and capacityrequirements.

Security in the LDACS Network

Unmanned aircraft systems, which include drones, are expanding in useand their popularity and the management of their airspace is becomingimportant. The enhanced LDACS system may coordinate and pre-plan routesand coordinate command and control (C2) and radio channel assignments,and prioritize flights for conflict resolution, and schedule flights inthe airspace. By properly managing these parameters, both unmanned andmanned aircraft may be efficiently operated in a safe manner duringflight. When evaluating these parameters, it is important to identifythe factors that impact them individually.

At the current time, route planning may not be critical due to thelimited number of manned aircraft and unmanned aircraft in a particulararea and the current requirements for visual line of sight (VLOS)control for unmanned aircraft. As aircraft operators move toward beyondline of sight (BLOS) flight, coordination with other aircraft, includingmanned and unmanned, will be more important to ensure that collisions donot occur. This coordination may include the use of air traffic controltransponder information, collision avoidance sensors, coordinatedlocation planning, peer-to-peer communication, and route scheduling.

The enhanced LDACS system is applicable to unmanned aircraft systems(UAS) and permits management of the airspace. It includes properpre-planning of routes, coordination of command and control (C2), radiochannel assignments, prioritization of flights for conflict resolution,and airspace scheduling. The enhanced LDACS system manages theseparameters, and as a result, both the unmanned and manned aircraft areefficiently operated in a safer manner during flight.

At the current time, route planning is a lower priority matter due tothe limited number of aircraft in a particular area and the currentrequirements for visual line of sight (VLOS) control for unmannedaircraft systems. However, as aircraft operators move toward beyond lineof sight (BLOS) flight, coordination with other aircraft becomes moreimportant to ensure that collisions do not occur. This coordination mayinclude the use of air traffic control transponder information,collision avoidance sensors, coordinated location peer-peercommunication, and route scheduling. Recently, there is a trend to usecommercial cellular network connectivity for BLOS UAS command andcontrol applications because contemporary cellular network coverage iswidespread, robust and secure. More recent advancements have improvedbandwidth availability, connection reliability and network latency,which are positive attributes for the UAS C2 use case.

As unmanned aircraft use continues to expand in popularity, managementof the airspace will become increasingly more important. Thiscoordination will need to include proper pre-planning of routes,coordination of command and control (C2), radio channel assignments,prioritization of flights for conflict resolution, and airspacescheduling. By properly managing these parameters, the unmanned andmanned aircraft will both be more efficiently operated and safer duringflight. When evaluating these parameters, it is important to identifythe factors that will impact them individually.

The enhanced LDACS system may use commercial cellular networkconnectivity for BLOS unmanned aerial system command and control, andmakes use of the advancements in bandwidth availability, connectionreliability and network latency, which are positive attributes for theUAS (unmanned aerial system) command and control. The current LDACSspecifications are missing security features found in modern cellularsystems, such as mutual authentication and encryption. Becausecyberattacks are becoming common, it is important to protect the LDACSdata stream to both manned and unmanned aircraft. The security featuresfound in the Long-Term Evolution (LTE) cellular protocol are employed inan enhanced LDACS system to prevent the exploitation of securityweaknesses in the existing LDACS specifications. The three main securitycomponents to be implemented are:

1) Authentication—The process in which the aircraft station isdetermined to be an authorized subscriber of the ground station'snetwork and in which a ground station is determined to be a valid serverfor the aircraft station. This procedure is commonly known as mutualauthentication.

2) Integrity Protection—This process guards against man-in-the-middleattacks using an integrity checksum.

3) Encryption—This process encodes transmitted data to preventunauthorized listeners from accessing the transmitted data.

To facilitate the deployment of LTE security features, the accessstratum of LDACS remains untouched. Authentication, integrityprotection, and encryption may be performed at the non-access stratumlayer through the LDACS Data Link Service. Referring to FIG. 60, theLDACS Data Link Layer (DLL) is shown for the logical channel structurein the aircraft station 740 and ground station 742. The higher layersfor voice, data and control are shown as operative with the LDACSManagement Entity (LME) 744, the Data Link Service (DLS) 746, the VoiceInterface (VI) 748, and the Medium Access Control (MAC) 750. The logicaldata channel (DCH) 752 as part of the user plane is illustrated with thelogical dedicated control channel (DCCH) 754 and broadcast controlchannel (BCCH) 756 and random access channel (RACH) 758. LTE services,in this case specifically the security procedures, are configured acrossthe DCH (logical data channel) 752 through DLS-PDUS (Data LinkServices-Protocol Data Units). The common control channel 760 isillustrated.

The acknowledged data operation is broken down further in the diagramsof FIGS. 61, 62, and 63. The addition of LTE security in the user planedoes not impact the LDACS protocol. The acknowledged operation of theaircraft station data link service is shown in FIG. 61 and illustratesthe basic flow and the addition of the transmit and receive media accesscontrol (MAC) critical data units containing the data link serviceprotocol data units that operate in conjunction with the logical datachannel, and if fragmented, are reassembled. As illustrated, a queue 760is operative with a serving window of the acked transport function 762 acorresponding to the transmission buffers and the received window of theacked transport function 762 b corresponding to receive buffers. Data isreceived and transmitted between a fragmentation and reassembly module764 that transports data to and from on the CCCH 760, DCCH 754, and DCH752. A radio resource manager 766 receives data regarding the statuschange and triggers for resource requests and includes a resourceacquisition module 768 and quality of service module 770 and transmitsalong the DCCH 754 into the GSLME/RRM module 755 that also transmitsdata to the quality of service module 770 for resource allocations fromthe ground station along the CCCH 760.

Similarly and having the same basic components, in the acknowledgedoperation of the ground station data link service (FIG. 62), the mediaaccess control protocol data units contain the data link serviceprotocol data units and are transmitted and received and operate withthe logical data channel and are fragmented and reassembled. At both theaircraft station and ground station, there is resource acquisition andquality of service as part of the radio resource management (RRM) 766.The quality of service interoperates and transmits resource assignmentsto a fragmentation and reassembly unit and the resource acquisition ofthe RRM 766 receives status changed and triggers resource requests froma queue for the DLS service data units (DLS-SDU). As shown in FIG. 63,mutual authentication 774 occurs with network attached security (NAS)776 with this example illustrating a cellular example that can beupdated to the enhanced LDACS system. As illustrated in this cellularexample, the HSS 780 communicates via EPS authentication vectors withthe MME 782 for mutual authentication and with the eNB 784 and the UE786. The NAS signaling includes integrity and ciphering.

Air Station Identification Module

As noted above, the ICAO standardization effort for LDACS has yielded abasic Media Access Controller (MAC) and physical-layer (PHY) definitionthat provides for communications fundamentals such as radio linkattachment and connection establishment, but no higher-layerarchitecture or procedures to support more advanced communicationsfeatures such as voice and data and Advanced Position and Timing (A-PNT)services. The enhanced LDACS system adds an Air Station IdentificationModule (ASIM) that provides advanced services, such as multiple networkoperator concepts, authentication, encryption and related functions.

As noted before, the enhanced LDACS system includes the LDACS groundstation and aircraft station that are enhanced to support the upperlayers of the LTE protocol stacks and custom elements that support thenetwork mobility and A-PNT features. The enhanced aircraft stationincorporates the LTE User Equipment (UE) protocol stack and leveragesthe aircraft station LDACS Data Link Services (DLS) to allow the LTE UEprotocol stack to communicate using the LDACS data resources.

To provide proper access and services in the enhanced LDACS system, theaircraft station requires a module for identification purposes, referredto as an ASIM (Air Station Identity Module), that is conceptuallyanalogous to a 4G LTE USIM (Universal Mobile Telecommunications SystemSubscriber SIM) card. The ASIM does not need to meet the USIM physicalpackage constraints, which is directed to the universal integratedcircuit card (UICC). Referring now to FIG. 64, the LTE protocol stack isillustrated and the ASIM is interfaced with the LTE UE protocol stack.The USIM interface is replaced with the ASIM interface.

As illustrated, the enhanced aircraft station 802 includes the LDACSaircraft station PHY 804 and MAC 806 layers and stack adaption 808 thatinterfaces with the LTE UE control plane protocol stack 810 and LTE UEdata plane protocol stack 812. The LTE UE protocol stack is showngenerally at 820 includes the RRC (Radio Resource Control) 882 that ispart of the LTE air interface control plane and allows broadcast ofsystem information related to the non-access stratum (NAS) 824, whichinterfaces with the ASIM 826. The RRC 822 also interfaces with the LTEPDCP (Packet Data Convergence Protocol) 828 and allows transfer of userplane data and control plane data with header compression, ciphering andintegrity protection. The RRC also interfaces with the LTE RLC 830 andthe LTE MAC 832 and the LDACS MAC/PHY 834.

The ASIM 826 securely stores subscriber-related information, includingnetwork identification numbers, a Public Land Mobile Network (PLMN)list, cell location information and subscription services, implementsthe security functions pertaining to authentication and ciphering, forexample, the private authentication keys and encryption algorithms, andis capable of receiving over-the-air updates. The ASIM 826 may use asecure messaging channel to pass requested data to the aircraft station.

This enhanced LDACS architecture is a viable command, control andcommunication link (C2/C3) by expanding the base LDACS waveform. Toincrease the security and privacy of the current LDACS protocol, the AirStation Identity Module (ASIM) stores security details, networkinformation and other future applications as they are developed. As aresult, a conventional LDACS systems may be expanded commercially tosupport multiple networks with varying levels of services with securechannels and equipment using the ASIM and transform a conventional LDACSsystem a more enhanced LDACS system.

The LTE non-access stratum (NAS) 824 layer communicates to the ASIM 826during normal enhanced aircraft station operation. Due to thesimilarities between a USIM and the ASIM 826, and to reduce complexitywhen incorporating LTE and potentially updating to 5G and beyondprotocol stacks, the Application Protocol Data Unit (APDU) messagingformat may correspond to the data structures in Table 9 and Table 10.This data structure is defined and maintained in ETS ITS 102 221 SmartCards, the UICC-Terminal Interface, and Physical and logicalcharacteristics.

TABLE 9 Contents of Command APDU Code Length Description Grouping CLA 1Class of Instruction Header INS 1 Instruction Code P1 1 InstructionParameter 1 P2 1 Instruction Parameter 2 Lc 0 or 1 Number of bytes inthe command data Body field Data Lc Command data string Le 0 or 1Maximum number of data bytes expected in response of the command

TABLE 10 Contents of Response APDU Code Length Description Data LrResponse data string SW1 1 Status byte 1 SW2 1 Status byte 2

An example of this messaging flow and sequence is shown in FIG. 65,indicating a connection request by the enhanced aircraft station (EAS)840 to the enhanced ground station (EGS) 842. During the cellsynchronization process the enhanced aircraft station 840 will query theASIM 844 to determine which PLMN should be given priority forattachment. Once a suitable enhanced aircraft station has been found theenhanced aircraft station 840 will request to attach triggering anauthentication procedure. The procedure requires data from both the ASIM844 and the LPC 846 to verify both devices. If this handshake isverified, the enhanced aircraft station 840 will assign the enhancedaircraft station resources for data traffic.

Peer-to-Peer Communications

In accordance with a non-limiting example of the enhanced LDACS system,peer-to-peer communications capability is added between aircraftstations, in effect forming a mesh communications network in the sky.Because interactions between aircraft are becoming more complicated astechnology improvements enhance speed and flight density within the sameair space, the ability to seamlessly and directly communicate betweenaircraft is more important. The peer-to-peer communications may: (1)relay information; (2) provide A-PNT services to ground infrastructurefor out-of-range aircraft; (3) have communications between “off network”aircraft operating in a common area; (4) provide warning and instructionfrom emergency air-traffic moving in the area; or (5) extendcommunications for other reasons.

It is possible for different communication networks to restrict the datastream between different classes of authorized aircraft stations. Formanned aircraft, a direct connection without the applicable servicelevel may result in limited information that is available fordistribution to the requesting aircraft e.g., critical parameters,including positioning data and emergency services. At a higher servicelevel, shared data and data volume may be negotiated by the cooperatingaircraft.

The ground station may operate as a gateway for connected aircraftstations to access services via a terrestrial network. In an example, aground station for the enhanced LDACS system includes a protocol stackadaption that provides the interface and protocol conversion between theenhanced LDACS system MAC and the LTE core network as an Enhanced PacketCore or EPC.

The aircraft station provides access to the services available throughdata connection with the ground station, and the aircraft station isexpanded with an LTE User Equipment (UE) protocol stack to create anenhanced aircraft station. Additionally, the aircraft station protocolstack includes a peer-to-peer protocol stack from Wi-Fi Direct and LTEDirect implementations as it becomes defined, and the 5G Directimplementation as will be explained in greater detail below.

The current LDACS specification utilizes 964-1010 MHz for theair-to-ground link and 1110-1156 MHz for the ground-to-air link.Peer-to-peer deployment may be located anywhere in the L band, however,the enhanced LDACS system may initially use the bandwidth between theforward link (FL) and the reverse link (RL) for peer-to-peercommunications or 46 MHz between 1037-1083 MHz. The enhanced LDACSsystem peer-to-peer protocol may retain the same channel characteristicsof a regular LDACS system, i.e., a bandwidth of 500 kHz, allowing for 92peer-to-peer channels. A time division duplex (TDD) system may be usedon a separate enhanced LDACS system radio device to support thesefrequencies.

Referring now to FIG. 66, there is illustrated a system diagramgenerally at 860 of peer-to-peer communications in the enhanced LDACSsystem in which routing is made possible by an application receivinglink metrics from the enhanced LDACS system peer-to-peer entities asenhanced aircraft stations (EAS). The enhanced ground station (EGS) 862is in communication with the enhanced air station (EAS) 864 as a host.The EGS 862 also communicates with the LPC 866, which in turn,communicates with the peer-to-peer server 868 that also operates andstores software for the LDACS peer-to-peer protocol. The EAS host 864communicates with other enhanced aircraft stations 870 that operate asclients for the host 864. The EAS host 864 also communicates with asecond EAS 872 and also operates as a client and host to communicatewith another EAS 874 as a client. A mesh network may be formed in anexample.

While in operation, higher layer applications may operate on theaircraft via direct LDACS peer-to-peer services to monitor for neededservices and at the same time broadcast their own available services.Services could include, but are not limited to, ground stationconnection, A-PNT, ATC, voice services and similar services. Theenhanced LDACS system peer-to-peer aircraft stations wake up duringspecific periods, either to broadcast or to listen to services. As theaircraft station 864 enters into proximity to another aircraft station872, each peer-to-peer service may evaluate the services available fromthe other aircraft station and if a service is in need, then theaircraft station may attempt to negotiate a direct link. After securinga direct link through a handshake procedure, required serviceinformation may be transmitted to and from the requesting aircraftstation 872. Security and authentication procedures may be based oncertificates, pre-shared keys, private keys, or through a differentmechanism and may be used to verify an aircraft station to anotheraircraft station. An aircraft station 864 may operate as a host incommunication with a ground station 862, which in turn, communicateswith the LPC 866 and peer-to-peer server 868. The host aircraft station864 may communicate with an aircraft station as a client host 872 orclient 870.

The mesh network and peer-to-peer communications of the enhanced LDACSsystem allow each aircraft station as a node to operate as both a clientand server. Connections can be made without requiring a ground stationconnection. The mesh network can be used to secure ADS-B data and passdata across oceanic LDACS ground station groups. The mesh network ofmultiple aircraft stations 864, 870, 872, 874 may extend the coverage ofan enhanced ground station as shown in FIG. 66. For example, a firstaircraft station 864 may connect to a ground station 862 and broadcastthat service connection to a second aircraft station 872. When thesecond aircraft station 872 comes into proximity with the first aircraftstation 864, it may negotiate a connection, and once it has beensecured, the second aircraft station may broadcast that it has a groundstation connection. A third aircraft station 874 in need of a groundstation link, after coming into proximity with the second aircraftstation 872 may negotiate a connection with the ground station andservice the third aircraft station through the second aircraft station'sconnection with the first aircraft station 864. The resulting meshnetwork may provide services in areas where it is not feasible to haveground station coverage, such as across a large body of water. Thepotential discovery plan for the aircraft station to aircraft stationinterface is shown in FIG. 67, and showing EAS1 and EAS2 indicatedgenerally at 876 and 878, each having an LDACS peer-to-peer protocollayer 876 a, 878 a and a MAC 876 b, 878 b, and PHY layer 876 c, 878 c.

The routing network application required to achieve this communicationsmesh will sit above the LDACS and peer-to-peer protocol and use arouting protocol to direct traffic. Potential open source protocolsinclude, but are not limited to: (1) RFC 6126: The Babel RoutingProtocol; (2) RFC 3626: Optimized Link State Routing Protocol (OLSR);(3) OSLRD2 implementing (RFC 7181: The Optimized Link State RoutingProtocol Version 2; and (4) RFC 6130: Mobile Ad Hoc Network (MANET)Neighborhood Discovery Protocol (NHDP), and batman-adv. Closed sourcelicensed routing protocols may take advantage of the enhanced LDACSsystem peer-to-peer capability. The enhanced LDACS system peer-to-peerprotocol may collect metrics at the LDACS MAC/PHY layer for the routingapplication to aid in making routing decisions.

An example discovery mode messaging flow for the enhanced LDACS systemand its peer-to-peer communication is shown in FIG. 68, and showing afirst enhanced aircraft station (EAS-1) 890 as a discover station andthe messaging flow among the EAS-1 890 and four other EAS discoverystations numbered 892, 894, 896, 898. In operation, the aircraft stationpeer-to-peer radio may broadcast the services that it is capable of andthe services that it currently may provide during appropriate resourceblocks. The services may vary based on equipment capability and networkconditions, such as the ability to contact a single ground station ormultiple ground stations. In an example, the aircraft stations that comewithin range may attempt to negotiate with each other to create apeer-to-peer session. During this negotiation, each aircraft station mayauthenticate the other aircraft station and if successful, allow for atraffic session. The host aircraft station 864 such as shown in FIG. 66may either directly or indirectly communicate with a ground stationthrough a direct frequency division duplex (FDD) standard LDACS link orthrough a previously established communications mesh to create a daisychain out to another aircraft station without a link to the groundstation. At the end of the session, the aircraft station may disconnectfrom the peer, typically when in range of a ground station or when theconnected aircraft stations move outside of range from each other.

The system architecture as described for peer-to-peer communicationsallows the enhanced LDACS system to be a viable command, control andcommunication air-to-ground link with support for peer-to-peer servicesby expanding the base LDACS waveform. This peer-to-peer protocol maybuild upon the strengths of the LDACS Standards, the 3GPP LTE protocols,and the WiFi Direct protocols to bring an enhanced protocol.

The enhanced LDACS system having peer-to-peer communications may beapplicable over those areas having few or no DME stations, e.g., overthe ocean. It is possible to increase the bandwidth in the peer-to-peercommunications using the bands associated with DME. For example, theduty cycle of DME signals is about 1-2%, and it is possible to use partof the DME band to enhance the peer-to-peer communications and takeadvantage of the low duty cycle.

As noted above, the peer-to-peer protocol stack may draw from WiFidirect and LTE direct implementations and as it becomes defined, the 5Gdirect implementation. The WiFi peer-to-peer technical specification maybe similar to the discovery process of normal WiFi performed via a proberequest and response, and include group owner negotiation and athree-step handshake to determine which device will be working on anaccess point, such as an aircraft station. The group owner may switch toa chip set having an access point mode and the peer-to-peer device, suchas the aircraft station, and may perform and attach with a peer-to-peergroup owner device, which may include IP allocation.

The LTE direct implementation may include the 3G PPTS 23.303proximity-based services, stage 2, and 3G PPTS 24.334,proximity-services user equipment. The pro se function may senddifferent parameters to the user equipment, including securityparameters, group IDs, group IP multicast addresses, and radio resourceparameters for usage in out-of-coverage scenarios. There may be directdiscovery and pro se direct discovery.

There are benefits of LTE direct over the WiFi direct because LTE mayoperate over 500 meters and WiFi is more limited. The 5G direct may be afully integrated device-to-device. It may also be possible to implementWiFi direct features and deploy the device-to-device modeling on top ofthe LTE cellular infrastructure without requiring any fundamentalchanges in LTE protocols by modifying the LDACS system and use the WiFidirect in LTE device-to-device modeling as shown in FIG. 69 anddescribed in the article from Asadi et al. entitled, “WiFi Direct andLTE D2D in Action” (2013), the disclosure which is hereby incorporatedby reference in its entirety.

As illustrated with the protocol diagram 900 of FIG. 69, a clusterclient 902 communicates with a cluster head 904, which in turn,communicates with the eNB 906 of the base station. The cluster client902 shares a WiFi channel 908 with the cluster head 904, which in turn,shares the LTE channel 910 with the base station 906. The cluster client902 includes a lower level WiFi stack that includes the MAC and PHYlayers. The cluster head 904 also includes the WiFi stack 912. Thecluster client 902 and cluster head 904 also include an upper layerstack 914 that includes the TCP/UDP, IP and LTE PDCP layers. The clusterhead 904 and base station 906 include the lower LTE layer 916 thatincludes the RLC, MAC and PHY, while the base station also includes inthe lower layer the PDCP. The base station 906 has a scheduler and thecluster head includes local traffic and PDCP protocol data units thatare part of the cluster client traffic. LTE transmissions are scheduledby the base station 906 and WiFi transmissions are handled in a FIFOmanner.

ADS-B Over the Enhanced LDACS System

As noted before, the Automatic Dependent Surveillance-Broadcast (ADS-B)is a surveillance technology in which an aircraft determines itsposition and periodically broadcasts it, enabling the aircraft to betracked. No interrogation signal is required from the ground because itis “automatic” and does not require pilot input. Mandatory “Out” signalsinclude information that is transmitted about altitude, airspeed andlocation, and the optional In signals include traffic and weatherinformation that is received from ADS-B ground stations and nearbyaircraft. The ADS-B information may be received by air traffic control(ATC) ground stations as a replacement for secondary surveillance radarbecause no interrogation signal is required. The signals can also bereceived by other aircraft to provide situational awareness and allowself-separation such as shown in FIG. 70, showing an aircraft 920communicating with aircraft 922 and with satellite 924 and base stations926, 928, 930.

Other automatic dependent surveillance groups include ADS-R(rebroadcast), ADS-S (secure), ADS-C (contract), and ADS-A (addressed).The acronym ADS-B refers to the “A” as automatic and without pilotintervention; the “D” as dependent information that is derived byaircraft from GPS; the “S” as surveillance to provide 3D aircraftposition velocity and related data; and “B” as broadcast informationsent in a broadcast mode.

The ADS-B content varies and may include an ICAO address where thesender has a unique ICAO address assigned to each mode-S transponder ofan aircraft that becomes a unique identifier, and a query tool as partof a world aircraft database from mode-S.org to determine more about theaircraft within a given ICAO address. The tables below show the variousADS-B content.

TABLE 11 ADS-B Bit Content Table nBits Abbr. Name 5 DF Downlink Format 3CA Capability 24 ICAO Aircraft Addr 56 Data Data Data [0-4] [TC] TypeCode 24 PI Parity/Interrogator ID

TABLE 12 ADS-B Type Code Table Type Code Content 1-4 Aircraft ID 5-8Surface Pos  9-18 Airborne Pos (w/Baro Altitude) 19 Airborne Velocities20-22 Airborne Pos (w/GNSS Height) 23-27 Reserved 28 Aircraft Status 29Target State and Status Info 31 Aircraft Operation Status

As noted before, ADS-B is a radio on an aircraft that automaticallybroadcasts precise location of the aircraft via a digital signal. It isone of the more prominent technologies supported by NextGen (NextGeneration National Airspace System). The ADS-B is used by Air Trafficcontrol (ATC) and other aircraft in the area to gain awareness on theposition of the broadcasting aircraft and the position of the aircraftis delivered to the ATC through a network of ADS-B ground stations. Theaircraft knows its position by decoding the GPS signal. The GPS isaugmented with Wide Area Augmentation System (WAAS), which improveslocation accuracy, integrity, and availability.

ADS-B signals are broadcast about once per second. In the US, theoperating frequency is 1090 MHz (1090ES) or 978 MHz (over UAT). Aircraftflying above 18,000 feet require 1090ES, but aircraft that fly below18,000 feet may use either UAT or 1090ES. The modulation is PulsePosition Modulation (PPM) and the data rate is 1 Mbps with a bitduration of 1 us. The message length is 112 bits/112 us, and includes 54information bits (other bits are overhead), and a 24-bit CRC checksum,which is capable of correcting up to five errors in the message.

As partially indicated in the tables above, ADS-B messages may includeflight identification (flight number call sign or call sign), the ICAO24-bit aircraft address (global unique airframe code), the position(latitude/longitude) and position integrity/accuracy (GPS horizontalprotection limit). Other data in the ADS-B messages may include thebarometric and geometric altitudes, the vertical rate (rate ofclimb/descent), an emergency indication (when emergency code selected),and special position identification (when IDENT selected). The maximumrage of a ground station is 250 nautical miles.

As of Jan. 2, 2020, ADS-B is required for flying in most of the UScontrolled airspace. The table below provides more specific information.Additionally, FIG. 71 provides a chart having definitions of variousparts of the airspace.

As illustrated, the class A 940 corresponds to ADS-B 1090 and is ESrequired and has a flight level of 600 to 18,000 mean sea level. Class B942 is ADS-B required and 10,000 mean sea level surface with 30 nauticalmiles (NM). Class C 944 is ADS-B required with 10,000 mean sea level tothe surface. Mode C veil 946 is ADS-B required and 10,000 mean sea levelto the surface. Class E 948 for the conus only is 10,000 mean sea leveland above, which is ADS-B required and at 2,500 above ground levelmountains, the ADS-B not required as illustrated. The Class E 950 isADS-B required and 10,000 mean sea level to 3,000 mean sea level and 12nautical miles from the coastline. Table 13 sets forth theserequirements in table format.

TABLE 13 Requirements for ADS-B in the United States Airspace AltitudeClass A All Class B Generally, from surface to 10,000 feet mean sealevel (MSL) including the airspace from portions of Class Bravo thatextend beyond the Mode C Vell up to 10,000 feet MSL (e.g., LAX, LAS,PHX) Class C Generally, from surface up to 4,000 feet MSL including theairspace above the horizontal boundary up to 10,000 feet MSL Class EAbove 10,000 feet MSL over the 48 states and DC, excluding airspace atand below 2,500 feet AGL Over the Gulf of Mexico at and above 3,000 feetMSL within 12 nautical miles of the coastline of the United States ModeC Airspace within a 30 nautical mile radius of Vell any airport listedin Appendix D, Section 1 of Part 91 (e.g., SEA, CLE, PHX) from thesurface up to 10,000 feet MSL

As noted before, there are also ADS-B Out and ADS-B In messages. ADS-BOut sends ADS-B information and ADS-B In receives ADS-B information.ADS-B Out has the aircraft sending its ADS-B messages to ATC via groundstations. ADS-B In has the aircraft receiving ADS-B messages from otheraircraft or from the ground stations when using ADS-B In at the UATfrequency (978 MHz). The aircraft may receive Flight InformationService-Broadcast (FIS-B) and Traffic Information Service—Broadcast(TIS-B), free of charge. ADS-B Out is mandatory while ADS-B In isoptional. ADS-B Out is required in the following regions or countries:Australia, Canada, China, Europe, Fiji, Hong Kong, Singapore, UnitedStates, and Vietnam. US ADS-B Coverage map may be found at the FederalAviation Administration website for NextGen airspace.

An overview of ADS-B architecture is presented in FIG. 72 and showngenerally at 960, and shows an aircraft 962, a satellite 964, and groundstations 966 that cooperate with each other. As illustrated, ADS-B Out968 includes the ADS-B transmitter 970 that is integrated with a GPSsystem 972 via a GPS receiver 974, but the system may use othersatellite navigation systems to receive positional data 976 besides theillustrated GNSS system. The ADS-B Out transmission may use the 1090 ESand the UAT transmission data link 978. ADS-B receivers on the groundstations receive ADS-B Out messages, which are relayed to the ATCthrough terrestrial links. The ADS-B system includes GNSS positionaldata 976 received via satellites 964 and operative with the ADS-B In 980having an ADS-B receiver 982 and data processing module such as TCAS(Traffic Collision Advance System) 984. ADS-B Out 968 communicates withADS-B In 982 via the 1090 ES/UAT data link 978, which communicates withADS-B ground stations 966 that includes the ATC (Air Traffic ControlSystems) 986, ADS-B receiver 988 and traffic broadcast 990.

The ATC (Automatic Traffic Control) 986 compiles TIS-B (TrafficInformation Server Broadcast) messages 990, which are broadcast to allaircraft within the ground station coverage area. These messages arebroadcast on both 1090 ES and UAT data link 978. All aircraft that haveADS-B In 980 are capable of receiving ADS-B messages. They may alsoprocess ADS-B Out 968 messages from other aircraft 962, e.g., for thepurpose of collision avoidance, or they may receive TIS-B messages togain general awareness of the traffic patterns in their vicinity.Furthermore, on UAT, the ADS-B In 980 operates with the aircraft and mayreceive weather information. There is a commercially offered satelliteversion of the ADS-B. This service is provided by the Virginia basedsatellite company, Aireon, which is a subsidiary of IridiumCommunications that operates a network of 66 LEO satellites forworldwide voice and data communication. In the satellite version ofADS-B, the terrestrial network in FIG. 72 is replaced by Iridium'ssatellite network. Through satellite connectivity, Aireon providesglobal aircraft surveillance for Earth's airspace.

ADS-B is not developed with security in mind. It is an open broadcastand as a result it is susceptible to a number of different RadioFrequency (RF) attacks. There are different vulnerabilities. A firstvulnerability is Eavesdropping (Aircraft reconnaissance). Since thesystem is open, i.e., it is transmitting on a known frequency, using thesignal of known properties and using no security measures, anyone with arelatively simple receiver may obtain mobility information on allaircraft that are within its radio horizon. There are even systems thatdeploy a network of ground-based ADS-B receivers, which collect ADS-Bmessages and make them available on the Internet. This information maybe easily misused by a malicious actor. Another vulnerability is jammingon both air-to-ground and ground-to-air air links, such as groundstation flood denial and aircraft flood denial. The location of theADS-B ground based infrastructure is generally known. Since the systemuses a single frequency (1090 MHz), a strong jammer in a vicinity of aground station may overpower the aircraft messages and hence, make theground station inoperable. Similarly, by sending a signal on 1090 MHz, asufficiently strong jammer may create a disruption of the aircraftreception on the ADS-B In side.

Despite its importance, through jamming, the ADS-B service may berelatively easily disrupted. Another vulnerability is message injection,including ground station target ghost injection/flooding and aircrafttarget ghost injection/flooding. Since ADS-B implements no transmitterauthentication, it is relatively simple to spoof the system and“impersonate” an aircraft. A spoofing transmitter may transmit messagesin a proper format, with a known aircraft ID, but with fake mobilityinformation. The ATC may obtain erroneous information on flying aircraftand it may be forced to control the airspace on the basis of erroneousdata.

Yet another vulnerability is message deletion as aircraft disappearance.A more sophisticated jammer may target a specific aircraft and jam itsmessages. As a result, the aircraft may disappear from the ATC. Anotherissue is message modification, such as virtual aircraft hijacking orvirtual trajectory modification. A malicious actor my inject messagesfor an already flying aircraft that show erroneous mobility information.As a result, the ATC would have incorrect information on the aircraft'strajectory. There are known prior cases where each of the listedvulnerabilities has been exploited.

An additional vulnerability of the ADS—B based ATC is the system'sdependency on satellite-based navigation and positioning. In the absenceof Global Navigation Satellite Systems (GNSS), the system stopsfunctioning. Since interruption of GNSS service is considered as a realpossibility, it may not be possible to decommission ATC based on HF/UHFradios and navigation based on DME/TACAN+VOR. Thus, the introduction ofADS-B does not render these legacy systems obsolete and as they arestill needed in the event that GNSS service becomes unavailable.

There are security issues with ADS—B based upon in three fundamentalproperties of the system. First there is no encryption of the messages.The ADS-B messages are “open.” Any individual with an ADS-B receiver mayread everyone else's message. The openness of the system is by design,and in that respect, the ADS-B is very different than most moderncommunication systems. For example, cellular standards (2G-5G), WiFi,WiMAX and even Bluetooth deploy encryption of the user data, whichprevents eavesdropping by unauthorized parties. Second, there is noauthentication of the transmitters. Anyone is allowed to transmit withinthe ADS-B system. There is no transmitter registration andauthentication. This allows malicious actors to act as imposters bygenerating fake ADS-B messages. The lack of authentication createsvulnerabilities associated with message injection, message deletion andmessage modification. Third, there is a single operating frequency.ADS-B operates on single frequency, i.e., 1090 MHz. Therefore, jammingof the system is relatively easy. Even a single tone jammer at 1090 MHzcan cause substantial denial of service on both ADS-B Out and ADSB-In.

There have been some attempts to address these security issues, such asdescribed in the article by Strohmeier et al. entitled, “On the Securityof the Automatic Dependent Surveillance-Broadcast Protocol” (2015), thedisclosure which is hereby incorporated by reference in its entirety.

The enhanced LDACS system addresses these security issues and can bestbe understood with reference to the block diagram of FIG. 73 illustratedgenerally at 1000. As shown in this FIG. 73, the ADS-B is implementedover existing communication systems. As illustrated, the satellitenavigations system 1002 operates such as with GNSS and WAAS andtransmits geolocation data to be used with the geolocation LDACS systemsuch as operating at 964-1010 MHz for ADS-B messages 1006. The systemmay work with UAT 1008 at about 978 MHz and the secondary surveillancerate (SSR) 1012 at 1030/1090. The system may also work with Mode S 1014,Mode C 1016, and Mode A 1018.

In the United States, ADS-B may use either UAT (978 MHz) 1008 orSecondary Surveillance Radar (Mode S) 1012. Both of these twocommunication systems were developed for alternative uses andsubsequently adopted by ADS-B, which operates to deliver a specificmessage type, i.e., the ADS-B message 1006, via either UAT or SSR ModeS. The enhanced LDACS system of FIG. 73 includes another communicationpath for ADS-B messages, which passes through the LDACS radio andthrough the LDACS terrestrial network, thus addressing many of the ADS-Bvulnerabilities as now explained.

First, LDACS provides message encryption. In LDACS, the unauthorizedeavesdropping is not possible. This enables privacy protection of theflying aircraft. For example, there may be multi-tier broadcasting onADS-B In, where every receiver receives the positions of flyingaircraft, but without their specific identification. This allowsfunctioning of collision avoidance systems, but still protects theprivacy of the aircraft. At the same time, an authorized receiver mayreceive additional information that will allow identification ofindividual aircraft, groups of aircraft or, as a maximum, all aircraft.Second, the LDACS requires that the parties join the network afterproper authorization. Therefore, the messages from unauthorizedtransmitters are not permitted. Spoofing of the system throughtransmission of fake aircraft position, message deletion or messagemodification is not easily accomplished. Third, in the L-band, the LDACSnetwork may use hundreds of channels. The allocation of channels may bedynamic and algorithms may be developed where the allocation takesinterference into account. Under such circumstances, the enhanced LDACSsystem becomes more robust towards jamming.

The enhanced LDACS system creates a secure replacement for ADS-B datatransport and includes the capability to encapsulate the ADS-B data andsecure it by authorization and encryption schemes that are provided onthe enhanced LDACS system communications link. It is possible in thefuture that the ADS-B system will be replaced with data derived from theLDACS ranging mechanism (A-PNT) and the enhanced LDACS system mayprovide the aircraft station with accurate knowledge of its position. Asnoted before, it is possible to split broadcast data fields into coarseand fine data fields to allow better control of what is available. Forexample, the fine data may be encrypted to prevent improper usage, andthe coarse data may be either unsecured or encrypted with a differentcertificate that is more publicly accessible. There may be multiplelayers of encryption using certificates from different authorities tolimit the availability of data to casual observers. It may also bepossible to use temporary identifiers so that the network knows who iswhere, but that casual observers cannot easily associate the aircraftstation with a specific entity.

The enhanced LDACS system shown in FIG. 73 offers additional benefits.First, LDACS offers positioning capabilities. Therefore, the ATC systemmay continue to function even in the absence of GNSS. Early trials ofLDACS positioning capabilities indicate accuracy that is superior toDME/TACAN+VOR. Therefore, the enhanced LDACS system allows for acomplete decommissioning of legacy navigation systems. Second, LDACSoffers a full-duplex communication. Therefore, the enhanced LDACS systemmay use both ADS-B Out and ADS-B In. ADS-B Out may be implemented withthe LDACS air-to-ground link, while ADS-B In may be implemented on theLDACS ground-to-air link.

Third, LDACS has a much higher capacity than the existing 1090ES channel1010. The capacity of 1090ES 1010 is not very large. In the current usemodel, the aircraft access the channel via a contentious protocol. Insuch circumstances, many of the ADS-B messages 1006 are lost. As thetraffic increases and as UAS aircraft enter the ATC management, thecapacity of the 1090ES link 1010 becomes an issue. Within the currentimplementation, there are no avenues for significant capacityimprovements of the system as only one channel is used.

On the other hand, the enhanced LDACS system may address capacity needs.First, the ADS-B messages 1006 may be scheduled, i.e., the accessprotocol is contention free. Therefore, a message loss is a rare event.Second, LDACS operates on many channels and the capacity of the systemsis much larger than what is offered on 1090ES 1010. Third, LDACS is acellular system, and at least in theory, an infinite capacity may beachieved through the processes of cell splitting and frequency reuse.Fourth, localized capacity demands for lower altitudes and UAS may beachieved through the enhanced LDACS system using the overlay/underlay.

Finally, the enhanced LDACS system offers peer-to-peer communication.This mode of the enhanced LDACS system may be used for ADS-B In absenceof terrestrial network. The enhanced LDACS system may also be used forFIS-B (Flight Information System Broadcast) messages. Currently FIS-Bmessages are sent only over UAT. Therefore, aircraft operating ADS-B Inon 1090ES do not have the capability of receiving FIS-B messages. Ifthese messages are sent over the enhanced LDACS system, all aircraftwith LDACS receiver may receive them.

As noted before, the conventional ADS-B system may also have drawbacksbecause it includes TMI and no authentication/encryption mechanism.Jammers or other adversaries or intruders may take advantage of thisdrawback and with only one aircraft ADS-B commercial radio, they mayreceive ADS-B messages that provide position and aircraft identityinformation and track all aircraft in the vicinity. This information mayprovide continuous tracking information, for example, and one may usesmall guided missiles, which navigate accurately using GPS withoutvisual sighting. Corporate espionage may be another issue because anintruder may track the location of known private aircraft to discerntheir business intent.

Securing ADS-B and Peer-to-Peer Communications

As noted before, the enhanced LDACS system operating in a peer-to-peercommunications system may broadcast information between aircraftstations automatically, and to satisfy privacy considerations for theADS-B data, the ADS-B data may be split into public fields and privatefields, corresponding to public data and private data. The public datamay be open or secured with a “long” term public encryption certificateand have a low resolution position with certain aircraft classes. Theprivate data may be secured with a short-term encryption certificateonly known to appropriate entities. The certificate becomes part of thepre-flight planning and the enhanced LDACS system may be updated foreach flight or updated more frequently if desired. This includes a highaccuracy position and unique aircraft identifier.

There may be peer-to-peer communications where the “public” ADS-B fieldsmay be transmitted to peer-to-peer aircraft stations and the preciseADS-B fields may be sent to the ground station to relay to air trafficcontrollers. FIG. 74 is a flow sequence showing an example of theinitial rollout messaging sequence. This flow sequence shows the ADS-B1020 and the AS1, AS2 and AS3 indicated at 1022, 1024, 1026respectively, and ground station (GS) 1028, ground station controller(GSC) 1030, HSC 1032, and ATC 1034. The peer-to-peer discovery processis shown with the authentication sequence and peer-to-peer connectionamong the components. It includes ADS-B messaging and update.

Referring now to FIG. 75, there is shown another flow sequence of theinitial rollout for the messaging sequence, and showing further detailsof the peer-to-peer certificate encryption and the peer-to-peerdiscovery process and connection among the three components shown inFIG. 74 of the ADS-B 1020, AS1 1022, and AS2 1024.

The LDACS peer-to-peer security may include authentication andencryption and may not have to rely on the availability of an HSS (HomeSubscriber Service) 1032 (FIG. 74) as a master user database stored in asingle node or alternative central trust server during theauthentication process. It may be certificate based and have varyinglevels and tiers such as commercial, hobbyist, etc. with precisecertificate data allowing certain entities to operate. Blockchainencryption may be used for enhanced security.

Peer-to-Peer Authentication in the Enhanced LDACS System

The enhanced LDACS system includes peer-to-peer communications thatrequire a different approach to authentication because anyauthentication may not rely on the availability of an HSS or alternativecentral trust server during the authentication process. There areseveral methods for decentralized authentication:

The first is web of trust. It is used in PGP (Pretty Good Privacy),GnuPG (GNU Privacy Guard), and other OpenPGP-compatible systems toestablish the authenticity of the binding between a public key and itsowner. In the web of trust, keys may be accumulated from others that aparty may designate as trusted introducers. Others will each choosetheir own trusted introducers, and everyone will gradually accumulateand distribute with their key a collection of certifying signatures fromothers, with the expectation that anyone receiving it will trust atleast one or two of the signatures. This will allow a decentralizedfault-tolerant web of confidence for all public keys.

The second is Cryptographically Generated Addresses (CGA). The purposeof CGAs is to prevent stealing and spoofing of existing IPv6 addresses.The public key of the address owner is bound cryptographically to theaddress. The address owner may use the corresponding private key toassert its ownership and to sign SEND messages sent from the address. Anattacker may create a new address from an arbitrary subnet prefix andits own or someone else's public key because CGAs are not certified.However, someone else's address may not be impersonated. Also ofinterest is Secure Neighbor Discovery (SEND) which uses CGA.

The third is blockchain, which may have a low number of attached peersat any point in time, however, making implementation challenging.

Authentication may occur in the enhanced LDACS system using thepeer-to-peer protocol and include autonomous operation and short-livedpublic keys with crypto based network identifiers. There may be mutuallyauthenticating peers such as aircraft stations that associate networkend-points to public keys and an asynchronous network with nopartitioning and eventual delivery after retransmissions and this jointmessage transmission paths. It is possible to publicize the lack ofconsensus where an authenticating peer as an aircraft station sendsproofs of possession to other peers and each peer tries to authenticatewith a majority decision at every peer. There may be trust groups andexecuted authentication and smaller trust groups, which may be governedby communication patterns.

Secure peer-to-peer communication with the enhanced LDACS system may bebased on the blockchain, which may validate a user's identity and ensuretrust between users as aircraft stations for exchanging messages. Theaircraft station's identity may be validated by a smart contract andconsider every other interaction as malicious. The smart contract may becode that is stored and executed on the blockchain. An aircraft stationmay generate: 1) a peer key using the ECDSA algorithm, 2) a public key,or 3) a private key, and derive an identity as the hash of the publickey. The private key may be safely kept by a party, e.g., Alice, andrequest to register its identity with the corresponding public key intothe blockchain. Further details may be found in the article by Khacef etal., “Secure Peer-to-Peer Communication Based on Blockchain” (2019), thedisclosure which is hereby incorporated by reference in its entirety.

Enhanced LDACS System and Positioning and DME/TACAN

There are also some constraints on air-to-ground LDACS frequency plan.The air-to-ground LDACS uses channels 301-391, for a total of 91channels. The odd channels are in between DME/TACAN assignments. Evenchannels are on frequencies that may be used for DME/TACAN. All siteswithin the radio horizon of a flying aircraft should operate ondifferent LDACS air-to-ground channels. At each ground station, theLDACS channels should be at least eight (8) channels away from theassigned DME/TACAN transmit channel. LDACS should not be on or at anadjacent channel to DME assignment on any of the sites within the radiohorizon of the ground station.

There now follows a description of an enhanced LDACS system that mayoperate alongside the existing DME/TACAN deployment. The enhanced LDACSsystem may provide global coverage over the CONUS and the frequencyassignments for LDACS cells may obey non-interference constraints asnoted above. Because the enhanced LDACS system may be used as analternative positioning system, at a flying altitude above 20,000 feet,an aircraft should “see” or receive signals from at least three andpreferably four LDACS cells. With four cells within the view, thetriangulation may yield estimates of latitude, longitude and altitude ofthe aircraft. The altitude estimate, however, is not required becausethe aircraft typically measures altitude directly. Therefore, most caseshaving three cells in view may be sufficient. It is possible and in somecases accuracy may be enhanced if more than four cells are viewable.

To establish a nominal cell radius of LDACS cells, a link budget shownin Table 14 may be employed. The parameters of the link budget arewithin the ranges as specified in the LDACS Standard and proposedAmendment.

TABLE 14 LDACS Link Budget G2A A2G Parameter Link Parameter Link PAPower (dBm) 42 PA Power (dBm) 42 Cable loss (dB) −2 Cable loss (dB) −2Antenna gain (dB) 9 Antenna gain (dB) 3 EiRP (dBm) 49 EiRP (dBm) 43 Fademargin (dB) −6 Fade margin (dB) −6 AS antenna gain (dB) 3 AS antennagain (dB) 9 Cable loss (dB) −2 Cable loss (dB) −2 RX Sensitivity (dBm)−95 RX Sensitivity (dBm) −95 Max path loss (dB) 139 Max path loss (dB)139 Nominal cell radius 212.81 Nominal cell radius 212.81 (km) (km)

The Ground Station (GS) may use an antenna gain of about 12 dB, whichwould extend the range of the cell beyond a 200 km value as calculatedin Table 14, corresponding to a link budget used in simulations. Thelink budget in Table 14 may provide substantial (about 6 dB) margin. TheLDACS link budget may support much larger cell radii with slightlylarger reliability. The LDACS receiver sensitivity value for the lowestmodulation and coding rate is on the order of about −104 dBm. The valueof about −95 dB used in the link budget table is significantly higher.For that reason, everywhere within the 200 km cell, an aircraft mayachieve a significant data rate. The radius of 200 km, however, may betoo large to provide enough cells for alternative positioning,especially at lower altitudes. It may be necessary to deploy cells ofsubstantially smaller radii to meet the requirement of seeing three tofour LDACS cells, thus increasing the cell site count over the CONUS. Tomeet the link budget and to provide good probability for an aircrafthaving at least 3 LDACS sites within the radio horizon, a nominal radiusof about 150 km is selected.

Based on the nominal cell radius of about 150 km, a theoretical celllayout for the enhanced LDACS system is shown in FIG. 76. To cover theentire CONUS with this LDACS service, the enhanced LDACS system mayrequire about 150 cells shown generally by the stars at 1050. A cellcount of 134 may be obtained in a regular cell layout that neglectsterrain features. In practice, due to real location cell placement andthe effects of terrain, the site count may be expected to be 10-15%higher.

FIG. 77 is a map of CONUS with the number of cells visible by aircraftgiven the numerical indicia 1-7 in the map, and FIGS. 78 and 79 showinga bar chart (FIG. 78) and graph (FIG. 79) for the number of cells thatare visible by an aircraft from a given location at an altitude of18,000 feet. This may be compared to the similar map of CONUS FIG. 80and FIGS. 81 and 82 showing the same analysis, but with an aircraftaltitude of 35,000 feet. FIGS. 78 and 79 in contrast show a bar chartand graph of the PDF and CCDF for a number of LDACS cells within theradio horizon of aircraft at 18,000 feet within CONUS.

At low altitudes (18,000 feet), an aircraft “sees” four or more LDACScells at 40% locations within CONUS. There are three or more cells over80% of CONUS area. These percentages do not provide global coverage overthe CONUS and to meet this requirement, additional ground stations needto be deployed. At higher altitudes (35,000 feet), there is significantimprovement and almost all areas see more than three and about 95% ofthe area see more than four cells. FIGS. 81 and 82 show a bar chart andgraph of PDF and CCDF for a number of LDACS cells within the radiohorizon of the aircraft at a high altitude of 35,000 feet within CONUS.There are few parts of the CONUS, however, where that requirement is notmet for this altitude. For example, those areas where the requirement isnot met could include southern Florida, the southern tip of Texas, andthe far northwest corners of the country.

The coverage prediction for the nominal system shown in FIG. 76 ispresented in the map of FIG. 83, where the ground-to-air link ispresented and the link budget from Table 14 is balanced. The antennapattern is assumed to have about 20 dB null at the azimuth of about 90degrees. The profile of the antenna pattern is specified as:

${G(\theta)} = {G_{\max}\frac{1}{1 + {99\mspace{14mu}\sin\mspace{14mu}\theta}}}$

where θ is the elevation angle above the horizon.

The coverage may be “coast to coast” and the RSL (received signal level)may be above −80 dBm almost everywhere, and for that reason, theenhanced LDACS system is not coverage limited. Within the CONUS, thesignal level should be sufficient.

A frequency plan may be developed and three types of constraintsconsidered, including (1) inter-system interference between LDACS andDME/TACAN on the ground; (2) inter-system interference between LDACS andDME/TACAN in the air; and (3) intra-system interference between LDACSground stations due to frequency re-use.

If the spectrum plan as shown in FIG. 1 is considered, it is evidentthat a given DME-TACAN site cannot cause interference to LDACS on bothground-to-air and air-to-ground links. If a DME-TACAN site has apotential for interfering to the LDACS reception on the ground, theaircraft that are served by this ground station will not interfere withan aircraft's LDACS reception in the air and vice versa.

Frequency planning in some cases may be a difficult combinatorialoptimization problem, and may be related to the generalizedgraph-coloring problem and is NP-hard (non-deterministic polynomial-timehardness). It is possible to use a computer based Automatic FrequencyPlanning (AFP) tool. In general, the frequency plan follows fixedduplexing space, but with LDACS, this is not the case and has twoimplications. First, the problem is less constrained and therefore, itis easier to find a viable frequency plan. Second, the frequencyplanning for ground-to-air and air-to-ground links may be conductedseparately.

The AFP tool solves the frequency plan using simulated annealing basedoptimization algorithm. An example of the results of the frequencyplanning for the enhanced LDACS system shown in FIG. 76 is presented inthe CONUS shown in FIG. 84, where each identified circle at 1060indicates the location of an LDACS ground station. There are two numbersassociated with each location where the ground station 1060 is located.The top number indicates the ground-to-air channel and the lower numberindicates the air-to-ground channel. Both air-to-ground andground-to-air channel plans have zero cost and solve frequency planningproblem without violating the interference constraints. This AFPoptimization trajectory of the cost function and the histogram ofchannel use associated with the frequency plan in FIG. 84 are presentedin FIGS. 85, 86, 87, and 88, showing a graph in FIGS. 85 and 87 for thecost versus epoch for respective air-to-ground and ground-to-air, and abar chart in FIGS. 86 and 88 showing the number of occurrences versuschannel. The frequency is uniform across both air-to-ground andground-to-air sets.

The enhanced LDACS system is well suited for deployment within the 1 GHzARNS band. From the link budget standpoint, the initial deploymentrequires about 150 base stations to cover CONUS. The overlay of theenhanced LDACS system onto DME/TACAN is shown in the map of CONUS inFIG. 89 shown by the larger circles 1070, the LDACS sites, and theDME/TACAN sites indicated by the periods at 1072. It is possible for 150sites to geo-position as an alternative to GPS and provide about 80% ofCONUS at an altitude of 18,000 feet and at about 95% of the CONUS at analtitude of 35,000 feet. The improvement of geo-location requires groundstations with smaller coverage radii. Within constraints of LDACSfrequency allocation and current frequency assignment of DME and TACANsites, it is possible to have zero cost frequency plans for bothair-to-ground and ground-to-air links. This frequency plan considersdeployment where a single LDACS channel is assigned to each site. Thisapproach provides coverage and sufficient capacity for command andcontrol. If there is a desire to increase the enhanced LDACS systemcapacity for user data, it is possible to either deploy smaller LDACScells or allocate more than one channel per LDACS cell, or, both.

Enhanced LDACS System Deployment Using Contiguous Spectrum

As noted above, the enhanced LDACS system may include a nominaldeployment of the LDACS within the Aeronautical Radio-Navigation Service(ARNS) frequency band (964-1215 MHz). This deployment assumes that thereare no changes to the rules of the band. LDACS is deployed as asecondary service under conditions of strict non-interference with theexisting systems. To ensure non-interference, the LDACS waveform isdesigned to occupy approximately 500 kHz of spectrum. Its spectralemission mask allows deployment of LDACS in-between two DME channels.

This type of approach is suboptimal from at least two standpoints.First, due to inverse duplexing scheme of the enhanced LDACS system andessentially the co-spectrum deployment between the LDACS system and DME,frequency planning requires that much of the spectrum is set aside asguard bands. Second, use of the 500 kHz waveform limits the data ratethat may be achieved on a single LDACS channel. Within that standard,the data rate limit is around 2.5 Mbps, which is quite low from thestandpoint of all contemporary wireless data systems, WiFi, 4G or 5G.

In an approach for the enhanced LDACS system, existing DME sites arefrequency re-planned so that a portion of the spectrum is cleared forLDACS use. It has been demonstrated that this approach is technicallyviable. Furthermore, this approach is not at odds with the existingLDACS standard because this approach may be pursued without anyrequirements that the standard be modified. However, this approach wouldhave to be supported by regulatory bodies, such as the FCC and FAA.

A proposed spectrum allocation for the ARNS band, where some spectrum iscleared for the enhanced LDACS system deployment is presented in FIG. 90where the DME/TACAN is replanned to free 20 MHz for the LDACSdeployment.

This spectrum plan vacates 20 MHz for deployment of the enhanced LDACSsystem. This amount of spectrum is somewhat arbitrary. It is possible todeploy the enhanced LDACS system with less than 20 MHz of spectrum.However, a 20 MHz channel is aligned with common terrestrial systems,such as WiFi and 4G. Also, it should be adequate to provide a broadbandexperience comparable to what is experienced on the ground. The DMEchannelization may operate in accordance with DME-X channels. The DME-Ychannels are rare in the current deployment, and DME-Z channels are notused. The enhanced LDACS system spectrum is selected to fit within thebands identified in the SESAR2020, PJ14-02-01 LDACS A/G Specifications,Aug. 16, 2019. For that reason, there are no changes to the standard.However, this enhanced LDACS system deployment will take 40 DME channelsout of service as can be compared in Table 15.

TABLE 15 Account of ARNS Spectrum Utilization from the Viewpoint ofDME-X Channelization DME Channels (Spectrum) Use Comment 1-18 (962-979MHz DME Out of use. These Not because of G2A and 1025-1042 DME channelsare not in LDACS A2G) service due to UAT and SSR at 1030 MHz. 19-28(980-989 MHz DME Free DME-X channels This is B1 in G2A and 1043-1052 MHzFIG. 14A DME A2G) 29-49 (990 MHz-1010 MHz Out of use. These DME G2A and1053-1073 channels are given to MHz DME A2G) LDACS for A2G communication50-59 (1011-1020 MHz Free DME-X channels This is B2 in DME G2A and1074-1083 FIG. 14A MHz DME A2G) 60-64 (1021-1024 MHz Out of use. TheseNot because of DME G2A and 1084-1087 channels are out of LDACS MHz DMEA2G) use due to SSR at 1090 MHz 65-69 (1025-1093 MHz Out of use. TheseNot because of DME A2G and 1151-156 channels are out of LDACS MHz DMEG2A) use due to SSR at 1090 MHz 70-85 (1094-1109 MHz Free DME-X channelsThis is B3 in DME A2G and 1157-1172 FIG. 14A MHz DME G2A) 86-106(1110-1130 MHz Out of use. These DME A2G and 1173-1193 channels aregiven to MHz DME G2A) LDACS for G2A communication 107-126 (1131-1150 DMEFree DME X channels This is B4 in A2G and 1194-1213 MHZ FIG. 14A DMEG2A)

Based on Table 15, channels available for DME/TACAN deployment aresummarized in Table 16. As it may be seen, after allocation of 2 times20 MHz for the enhanced LDACS system, there are 56 channels that arestill available for DME/TACAN use. In order for the proposed approach towork, the enhanced LDACS system includes a frequency plan for theexisting DME/TACAN sites using only 56 channels as shown in Table 16.

TABLE 16 Channels Available for DME Deployment Band Channels Number ofChannels B1 19-28 10 B2 50-59 10 B3 70-85 16 B4 107-126 20 Total 56

An Automatic Frequency Planning (AFP) routine was used to devise afrequency plan for DME/TACAN sites using only channels from Table 16.The AFP routine re-plans DME/TACAN across the entire North America,e.g., Canada, US, and Mexico. The results of the AFP are illustrated inthe proposed spectrum allocation of FIG. 90, and the graph and barcharts shown respectively in FIGS. 91 and 92. The decrease of the costfunction (FIG. 91) and the frequency re-use of each individual channel(FIG. 92) are shown from Table 16. To replan all DME/TACAN sites withinNorth America, each of the channels from Table 16 will used about twentytimes. Given the size of the continent and the number of DME/TACANsites, i.e., about 1070, this is not a very aggressive frequency re-use.The frequency planning is not overly constrained, and a solution may befound with relative ease. The gaps shown in the bar chart as a histogramof FIG. 92 are used for UAT, SSR (1090/1030 MHz) and in the enhancedLDACS system at 990-1010 MHz for air-to-ground and 1110-1130 MHz forground-to-air. The minimum DME/TACAN co-channel separation is about 200km.

FIG. 93 is a map of the northeast section of the United States, which isthe area with the highest density of DME/TACAN sites. The re-use offrequencies is not very tight. Most of the frequencies are used only onetime. However, there is some re-use. For example, channel 23 as shown incentral Pennsylvania as indicated by the circled site numbered 1082 isre-used. However, the DME/TACAN sites using channel 23 are far from eachother, where one of those sites is in southwest Pennsylvania and theother site is in south Delaware.

Having 20 MHz of available spectrum allows for two basic deploymentoptions. In the first option, 20 MHz may be divided into individual 0.5MHz channels, corresponding to 40 LDACS channels in the enhanced LDACSsystem. Using frequency re-use of N=7, as recommended by the SESAR2020Standard, it is possible to have 5 or 6 LDACS channels per site. Throughprocess of channel aggregation, it may be possible to achieve athroughput on the order of 12-15 MHz per site.

In the second deployment option, the enhanced LDACS system is deployedin a manner similar to LTE. In this option, each site uses the entire 20MHz and the re-use scheme is N=1. Even though the enhanced LDACSstandard has waveforms of larger bandwidths, the focus so far in theenhanced LDACS community has been on 500 kHz deployment. However, it isreasonable to expect that in this deployment option, the enhanced LDACSsystem may be as spectrally efficient as LTE or WiFi. Even in aconservative estimate, this could mean throughputs in excess of 50 Mbpsper each LDACS site. In other deployment options, there may be hybridsof these options.

Alternative Positioning, Navigation and Timing within the Enhanced LDACSSystem

The enhanced LDACS system may use the LDACS standard defined MAC and PHYwith modern cellular industry elements to provide AlternativePositioning, Navigation, and Timing (A-PNT) services as a component forthe communications to an aircraft station. The FAA requires flightoperations to be maintained in situations where GPS, or similar systems,become unusable.

Referring now to FIG. 94, there is illustrated the enhanced LDACS systemgenerally at 1090. As noted before, the LDACS standards define twodistinct system elements as the Ground Station (GS) and the AircraftStation (AS) 1094. The ground station 1092 transmits the LDACS ForwardLink (FL) signals and includes signaling to enable an aircraft stationto detect, synchronize and decode the broadcast messaging to enable theaircraft station 1094 to establish a connection. The ground station 1092serves as a gateway for any connected aircraft station 1094 to accessservices via a terrestrial network. The aircraft station 1094 includesthe subscriber radio that is mounted on-board aircraft and includes theForward Link (FL) receiver functionality and Reverse Link (RL)transmitter functionality, which detects, synchronizes to, and thenestablishes a connection with the local ground station 1092. Theaircraft station 1094 provides access to the services available via adata connection with the ground station. Similar to cellularcommunication systems, an LDACS ground station 1092 continuouslytransmits and the LDACS aircraft station 1094 may perform pseudo-rangingon the ground station from these transmissions. If the aircraft station1094 is able to receive transmissions from four or more ground stations1092, then the aircraft station may determine its position inthree-dimensional space, similar to GNSS (Global Navigation SatelliteSystem), e.g. GPS or Galileo. The enhanced LDACS system includescapability to handoff to a commercial cellular provider or operate withLDACS underlay (U) and overlay (O) sites and communicate via satellite.The aircraft station 1094 is shown with different antenna systems andcommunication modules and components. Ground station 1092 components areillustrated.

As noted before, flight trials by DLR have demonstrated that an accuracyof approximately 15 meters is achievable in practice, which is betterthan the achievable accuracy of current DMEs (Distance MeasuringEquipment). The required synchronization error can be achieved usingaffordable GNSS-disciplined, rubidium atomic clocks at the groundstations that have a small drift and can continue to function withsufficient accuracy for several hours in the case of a GNSS failure. Toovercome an extended GNSS outage, other fallback methods for PNT(Positioning, Navigation and Timing) may be incorporated into theenhanced LDACS system along with a timing re-discipline mechanism thatdoes not rely on GNSS. A technique for synchronization may rely on anatomic clock distribution network.

In order to supplement the PNT features of the enhanced LDACS system,the ground stations may be enhanced to transmit their physical location.The aircraft station may calculate its position within varying degreesof accuracy by calculating the time difference of arrival and angle ofarrival for all ground stations within range. As the number of observedground stations increases, the accuracy of the position measurement mayincrease as shown in FIGS. 95, 96, and 97 where three eNB's 1100, 1102,1104 are illustrated. Case 1 (FIG. 95) with 1 eNB (E-UTRAN Node B), andcase 2 (FIG. 96) with the more precise location of three eNB's 1100,1102, 1104, and showing angle-of-arrival in case 3 (FIG. 97), showingthe example of the Node B 1102 as a connection between nodes in a mobilephone network so that positioning takes advantage of LDACS stations, butmay use commercial cellular systems.

A ground station positioning assist message may include rangeinformation to a set of neighboring LDACS ground station sites, and foreach neighbor, may include acquisition information such as the channel,timing, offset and similar factors, and the distance from a servingground station to a neighbor ground station site.

Alternatively, over time, a received signal strength heat map may becreated from repeated ground station measurements. This environment isless likely to change over time compared to WiFi environments, or evencellular environments, and a precise map may be made for an aircraftpre-flight pattern to improve positioning measurements when fewersignals from fewer numbers of ground stations can be received.

Table 17 below shows the positional accuracy of different radionavigation systems.

TABLE 17 A Comparison of Various Radio Navigation System Accuracies 95%Accuracy System (Lateral/Vertical) Details LORAN-C 460 m/460 m Thespecified absolute Specification accuracy of the LORAN-C system.Distance 185 m (Linear) DME is a radionavigation aid Measuring that cancalculate the Equipment (DME) linear distance from an Specificationaircraft to ground equipment. GPS 100 m/150 m The specified accuracy ofSpecification the GPS system with the Selective Availability (SA) optionturned on. SA was employed by the U.S. Government until May 1, 2000.LORAN-C 50 m/50 m The U.S. Coast Guard reports Measured “return toposition” Repeatability accuracies of 50 meters in time difference mode.Differential 10 m/10 m This is the Differential GPS GPS (DGPS) (DGPS)worst-case accuracy. According to the 2001 Federal RadionavigationSystems (FRS) report published jointly by the U.S. DOT and Department ofDefense (DoD), accuracy degrades with distance from the facility; it canbe <1 m but will normally be <10 m. Wide Area 7.6 m/7.6 m The worst-caseaccuracy that Augmentation the WAAS must provide to be System (WAAS)used in precision Specification approaches. GPS Measured 2.5 m/4.7 m Theactual measured accuracy of the system (excluding receiver errors), withSA turned off, based on the findings of the FAA's National SatelliteTest Bed, or NSTB. WAAS Measured 0.9 m/1.3 m The actual measuredaccuracy of the system (excluding receiver errors), based on the NSTB'sfindings.

In order to achieve increased positional accuracy, it is possible tosupplement the normal LDACS ground station with low cost, navigationalbeacon LDACS ground stations. Each navigational beacon LDACS groundstation could broadcast supplemental navigation information on differentfrequencies or, in-order to prevent a significant frequency usage,transmit bursts of data allowing for multiple navigational LDACS groundstations to share a common frequency. These lower cost navigationalbeacon LDACS ground stations would not only aid in position accuracy,but would also help with positional integrity by increasing the numberof LDACS ground stations for redundant ranging. Navigational beaconLDACS ground stations may lower cost by potentially eliminating theentire receive chain as the navigational beacon LDACS ground stationswill not interact with aircraft stations, use lower transmit power, anduse simpler antennas. Furthermore, operational expenses should bereduced by installing navigational beacon LDACS ground stations onbuildings, water towers, and similar structures instead of using propertowers, which is a significant cost.

There is development of a suitable positioning algorithm. A positioningalgorithm used by LDACS receivers on the aircraft may be developed. Thisalgorithm may exploit the waveform structure of the LDACS signal, timingorganization, broadcast messages, and many other characteristics of theground transmission. The LDACS system is primarily intended for AirTraffic Control (ATC) communication, but support the needs of A-PNT thesystem should deploy a sufficient number of sites. Everywhere in theairspace of interest the aircraft station needs to see enough LDACSsites so that the position calculation is possible. As a result, thesystem may deploy more sites than what is required for communicationneeds. Not all of deployed sites have to be communication sites. Some ofthem may just be beacon sites that are used exclusively for A-PNT. Suchsites require no backhaul and they may be miniaturized and manufacturedat significantly lower cost than regular sites.

It is possible to use smaller localized signals as references forchannel estimation and more precise ranging characteristics and this maybe helpful versus the large booming towers in other location systems.Integrity may be provided by redundant ranging similar to ReceiverAutonomous Integrity Monitoring (RAIM) and perform redundant ranging insituations where more than four ground stations are visible. The LDACSlocation may be compared against RF ranging measurements and the minimalnumber of LDACS ground station may be employed as an LTE monitor. Theenhanced LDACS system may estimate the channel characteristics and RFpropagation path. If a particular channel is experiencing issues, thenone of the other signals may be used for ranging. This may be lesseffective, however, than the under canopy system as described.

Positional integrity is an important aspect of aviation positioningsystems, and is the measure of the trust that can be placed in thecorrectness of the information supplied by a navigation system.Integrity includes the ability of the navigation system to providetimely warnings to users when the system should not be used fornavigation. GPS integrity systems include Receiver Autonomous IntegrityMonitoring (RAIM) and Wide Area Augmentation System (WAAS). The enhancedLDACS system positioning as described benefits from redundant ranging insituations where more than four ground stations are visible to determineif any of the ground stations are having channel issues which would leadto position error. The extra navigational beacon LDACS ground stationswill improve navigation. It is possible to broadcast more detailedground station information, including but not limited to, antennacharacteristics such as angle and elevation, both above ground level(AGL) and mean sea level (MSL), allowing an RF ranging measurement thatprovides another technique for integrity.

LDACS ground stations may operate as an LDACS/LTE monitor and create aWAAS or RAIM like system using LDACS/LTE system and be applied to anyform of communication, i.e., not limited to LDACS, to any type ofaircraft such as UAS. RAIM systems for cellular positioning have beenexamined and this could be extended to LDACS. The LDACS ground stationknows its precise location either through a highly accurate survey attime of install, or by listening to other systems such as LTE todetermine its precise location. Initial position and timing could bedone through GPS or potentially with a network synchronization via IEEE1588 as a precision time protocol. The LDACS ground station compares itsprecise location to calculated positions from other LDACS groundstations and determines correction factors and integrity checks. Thesevalues could be broadcast from the ground station or transmitted back toa main data server, which sends correction values over an LDACScommunications link to eliminate the need for using an extra channel atthe airport.

There may be some resolution of the timing advance in the enhanced LDACSsystem. The resolution may need to be increased to improve thepositioning resolution for the aircraft station. It is possible to usemultiple radio access technology (RAT) receivers to improve resolutionat lower altitudes and transition to a cellular receiver below a certainaltitude. LTE resolution is able to meet e911 accuracy requirements. Thereceiver may be passive and may not need to have any active servicerequirements.

The ground station link information message may provide improved timingadvance resolution to the aircraft station. The ground station maymeasure the round trip time used for calculating timing advance and thetiming advance value may be reported to the aircraft station for limitedresolution that is sufficient to maintain the length. The additionaltiming resolution may be provided to the aircraft station via a newmessage or extend the LDACS message. There may be additional messagingand parameters that are exchanged from the ground action to the aircraftstation.

A-PNT Systems for Aeronautical Use and LDACS

As noted before, in aeronautical applications, navigation andpositioning are predominantly based on L1 GPS signals. The aviationcommunity accepts that there should be an A-PNT to L1 GPS. The A-PNTshould be a terrestrial system.

Currently, the A-PNT services are based on mostly DME/DME and VOR/DME.There is a working group under SESAR that is investigating “AlternativePositioning, Navigation and Timing, A-PNT” (PJ14-03-04). Therequirements for A-PNT are split into three main categories: (1) supportfor navigation; (2) support for ADS-B Out; and (3) provisioning oftiming reference for on-board systems. The principal application in eachcategory and relevant performance requirements are provided in Table 18.

TABLE 18 A-PNT Requirements Short term Long term Application categoryrequirement requirement Navigation RNP 1 (P-RNAV) RNP 0.3 ADS-B N/AADS-B RAD 3 nm separation Time reference 1 s (w.r.t UTC) 1 s (w.r.t UTC)RNP = Required Navigation Performance ADS-B RAD = ADS-B in RADar space

In the current stage, the scope of A-PNT is limited to continentalen-route and Traffic Management Advisor (TMA) phases of the flight.A-PNT should support the performance level required for most demandingapplications covering en-route and TMA phases of flight. Nevertheless,these requirements are lower than what is achievable through GNSS.

It is possible to use DME/DME, Multi-DME, eLORAN and LDACS. It isexpected that a selected technology will integrate with aircraftinertial systems. Performance of L1-GPS is provided in Table 19 astaught by the Global Positioning System Standard Positioning ServicePerformance Standard, 5th Edition, April 2020. The performance of A-PNTneeds to be at least close to L1-GPS.

TABLE 19 The GPS Standard Positioning Service (SPS) Error Limits Globalaverage Worst site Type of error 95% of time 95% of time Horizontalposition  9 m (30 ft) 17 m (56 ft)  error Vertical position 15 m (49 ft)37 m (121 ft) error

DME has been studied for DME range accuracy. Modern DME equipmentroutinely exceeds initial technology specifications. A DME performancemeasurement campaign has been conducted and the results were reported inthe article by Vitan et al., “Assessment of Current DME Performance andthe Potential to Support a Future A-PNT Solution,” (2015). During thistrial more than 800,000 valid DME ranges were collected from over 100ground stations installed in France and its neighboring countries. Theanalysis of the data concluded that the 95% bounds (2σ) for the errordistribution of the aggregated dataset are lower than 0.1 nautical miles(NM) (˜180 m). This is two times smaller than the most stringentstandard requirement of 0.2 NM, at least for systems not used forapproach procedures. DME/DME has some accuracy. The data set evaluatedin Vitan et al. was used to access the accuracy of DME/DME positioning.It was observed that the actual DME/DME accuracy was better than thestandard's performance baseline by a factor of two, as it can beanticipated on the basis of the actual range accuracy. These results ledto the conclusion that current transponders could support Total SystemError (TSE) values down to 0.5 nautical miles (NM), assuming a FlightTechnical Error (FTE) allocation of 0.25 NM, for the typical subtendedangle range used by Flight Management Systems (FMS's) of 30 to 150degrees. Even lower TSE values may be obtained for tighter subtendedangle limits.

Research has been conducted by Vitan et al., “Research on AlternativePositioning Navigation and Timing in Europe” (2018), and the DME/DMEnavigation meets RNP 1 requirements over en-route and TMA air spaces.Efforts are underway to codify DME/DME as A-PNT system. DME evolutionincludes so called “passive ranging.” In passive ranging, DME sendspseudo random pulses from a ground station that are not responses tointerrogation. If the aircraft receives signals from at least three DMEground stations it may use TDOA to compute its location. However, forpassive ranging, ground stations need to be mutually synchronized.Passive ranging solves capacity issues associated with DME systems,i.e., it may serve unlimited number of aircraft. Most aircraft have dualmultichannel DME receivers capable of tracking 6-10 different DME groundstations. The multi-DME utilizes this redundancy to process more than 2DMEs. The approach is especially useful around large airports where onefinds many DME ground stations. However, the methodology is still underdevelopment and evaluation.

Alternative Positioning, Navigation and Timing in the Enhanced LDACSSystem Based on LDACS and Long Range Navigation

Research has been conducted with eLORAN, which stands for enhancedLOng-RAnge Navigation. The system introduces advancement in receiverdesign and transmission characteristics, which increase the accuracy andusefulness of traditional LORAN/LORAN-C. With reported accuracy as goodas ±8 meters, the system is competitive with unenhanced GPS. eLORAN alsoincludes additional pulses, which can transmit auxiliary data such asDifferential GPS (DGPS) corrections. These enhancements make eLORAN anA-PNT when GPS is unavailable or degraded. eLORAN is a low-frequencyradio navigation system that operates in the frequency band of 90 to 110kHz. According to Vitan et al., eLORAN meets RNP 0.3 requirements foraccuracy, availability and integrity. It may be used to support bothen-route and non-precision approach and eLORAN is built upon LORAN-C. Itadds additional data channel (LDC) to convey corrections for major errorsources.

Further improvement of eLORAN may be achieved through ground-basedaugmentation and using ground stations for differential correction.eLORAN is difficult to jam. The transmit powers of eLORAN stations arein the range of 100-1000 kW (80-90 dBm). As a comparison, GPS satellitesradiate approximately 100 W (50 dBm). An example location of LORANstations is shown in FIG. 98, which are shown by the dots labeled at1110. The coverage is not global. USA, Europe, Middle East (SaudiArabia), and southeast Asia are covered. The systems in Norway andFrance may already be turned off. eLORAN may be used to recover UTCtiming with accuracy of 50 ns. There are commercial receivers thatintegrate GNSS and eLORAN.

On two occasions, in 2008 and 2015, the US government announced itscommitment to eLORAN as a backup to GPS. Also, the President's PNTAdvisory Board has repeatedly recommended and endorsed eLORAN. In 2014,Congress prohibited further dismantling and disposal of Loran-Cfacilities until the government had decided and implemented a backupsystem for GPS. In late 2019, Hellen Systems and its integrator L3HarrisTechnologies, Inc. were awarded a contract to demonstrate functioning ofeLORAN to the Department of Transportation (DOT). The demonstration ofHellen's next-generation solution may include a solid-state eLORANtransmitter from Continental Electronics Corp. integrated with advancedtiming and frequency products from Microsemi Corporation, as asubsidiary of Microchip Technology, Inc.

UrsaNav supplies eLORAN and low-frequency technology for very wide-area,GPS-independent, PNT data and frequency services. UrsaNav was selectedby the Volpe Center as part of the Department of Transportation todemonstrate wide-area UTC time synchronization and distributionutilizing the former LORAN site in Wildwood, N.J. The demonstration willbe conducted at one of the Volpe Center sites at Joint Base Cape Cod inMassachusetts or the Langley Research Center in Langley, Va. Either sitemay be used in the demonstration as eLORAN signal transmissions from theWildwood site can easily cover 700 miles or more. The demonstrationshould happen in 2020. Based on recent activities, that USA governmentplans to keep eLORAN as a fundamental backup A-PNT system for GPS. Thechief sponsor of the efforts seems to be US Department ofTransportation.

The enhanced LDACS system is enhanced for positioning above what DLR(German Aerospace Center) has accomplished in 2013, where DLR conducteda flight trial using 4 LDACS stations located approximately 50 km apart.The tests were done in German airspace. The synchronization errorbetween the ground stations was smaller than 20 ns. It was claimed inVitan et al. that location calculations used the approach outlined inNossek et al., “A Direct 2D Position Solution for an APN-T System(2015). No specific details of the actual algorithm were given, however.The simulation of LDACS' A-PNT accuracy is shown in FIG. 99 and takenfrom Vitan et al. The label ‘Grd’ at the left hand X,Y,Z axisintersection shows ground level. The numerical indicia on the rightcolumn are referenced to the cloud structure. The dots indicated at 1120on the lower section of the graph represent location of LDACS cells.There are 159 stations covering the entire territory of Germany. LDACSstations are placed at locations of current DME ground stations, whichmay not be optimum from either interference management standpoint orfrom the standpoint of location accuracy.

The location accuracy may be assessed at three aircraft altitudes: 350feet, 1,200 feet and 8 km. The synchronization error is assumed smallerthan 20 ns. At low altitudes, accurate positions may be obtained only inlimited number of locations. However, in places where the location couldbe obtained, the accuracy is good. It is 0.1 NM or better as shown atthe shaded areas. As the altitude of the aircraft increases, the areaover which good accuracy may be obtained becomes larger.

Referring again to the graph of FIG. 99, at the altitude of 8 km, theentire area of Germany is covered shown by the upper slow structure 1122with the RNP-XT [NM] of about 0.1. The location accuracy better than 0.1NM could be achieved over the entire country. According to Vitan et al.,the performance at 8 km is better than what could be achieved with DMEsystems. The results shown in the graph of FIG. 99, on the other hand,assume that receiver evaluates all available LDACS signals. Therefore,presented results establish the upper limit on performance. In realworld scenarios, however, the limited processing power of the receivermust be taken into account. This likely imposes the limit on the numberof LDACS channels that could be used at the same time. There is aproposal to develop a hybrid system that uses LDACS and DME. The resultwas simulated and presented to ICAO in November 2015. Simulationsindicate position accuracy better than 100 meters over most of thecontinental Europe. The simulation used existing 787 DME and 69 LDACSsites.

A comparison may be made between the proposed systems against A-PNTrequirements. Table 20 provides comparison of the proposed A-PNT systemsand their capabilities against stated requirements.

TABLE 20 Comparison of A-PNT Capabilities and Requirements ApplicationShort term Long term DME category requirement requirement based eLORANLDACS Navigation RNP 1 RNP 0.3 YES YES YES (P-NAV) ADS-B N/A ADS-B RADNO NO YES 3 nm separation Time 1 s (w.r.t 1 s (w.r.t YES YES YESreference UTC) UTC) (passive ranging)

A-PNT systems require a solution for a non-GPS based timing reference.In the present form, DME systems are asynchronous. However, to deal withthe requirement for increased capacity, a system may need to transitionto passive ranging. In passive ranging, ground transmittersynchronization is required. This synchronization would have to bebetter than 30 ns. eLORAN is built to provide timing reference that isindependent of GPS and within 100 ns of the UTC time. Measurementcampaigns have demonstrated that current systems have time accuracy thatis better than 50 ns as noted in Johnson et al., “An Evaluation ofeLORAN as a Backup to GPS,” (2007). There are multiple reports thatstate that, for the purposes of timing reference, eLORAN represents aviable alternative to GPS as noted in Johnson et al. The LDACS standardrequires that ground stations be synchronized. At the current time,there are no solutions accepted for this synchronization. The LDACStests performed by DLR, which are the only example of LDACS systemdeployment, used manual synchronization of ground stations using the Rbatomic clock as noted in Shutin et al., “LDACS1 Ranging Performance—AnAnalysis of Flight Measurement Results” (2013).

Out of the three proposed A-PNT approaches, the enhanced LDACS systemmeets all requirements because of its capability of supporting ADS-B.However, use of LDACS in navigation and timing reference requires thesolution of two important technical challenges. The first challenge istiming reference and synchronization of LDACS ground stations. Thesecond challenge is the position estimation algorithm. The enhancedLDACS system may support ATC communication services, but also, deploy asufficient number of ground stations to enable positioning calculations.

Use of the enhanced LDACS system for A-PNT faces three technicalchallenges, listed as: (1) synchronization of LDACS ground stations; (2)development of a suitable positioning algorithm; and (3) a network orsystem deployment.

It should be understood that there is synchronization of LDACS groundstations. LDACS ground station synchronization may be achieved in twoways: wireline or wireless. Wireline synchronization implies that LDACSobtains timing from one of the atomic clock distribution sites. The mapof these sites may be obtained from Bureau International des Poids etMeasures (BIMP) as shown in FIG. 100 where two-way and GNSS equipmentare labeled 1130 and GNSS equipment are labeled 1132. There are severalsites in the United States that provide the atomic clock based timingreference. The enhanced LDACS system may use these sites and some formof clock distribution technology, e.g., IEEE 1588, to achieve a systemwide synchronization.

An alternative to the wireline synchronization is wirelesssynchronization. An example of a wireless timing reference for theenhanced LDACS system is shown generally at 1140 in FIG. 101. The system1140 combines a GPS receiver 1142 and an eLORAN receiver 1144. Positiondata 1146 is taken in and the position calculation is made 1148 withadditional data from ASF maps 1150 and input into the decision algorithm1152. The output of the system as a resilient PNT output 1154 is usedfor synchronization of LDACS stations. If GPS is present, thesynchronization is obtained from the GPS receiver 1142. This may beredundant as the aircraft receives the same GPS signal. However, the GPSsignal at the ground station may be used for fine calibration ofAdditional Secondary Factors (ASF) maps 1150. In the case of the GPSoutage, the decision algorithm 1152 switches to positioning based oneLORAN via the eLORAN receiver 1144.

The enhanced LDACS system, in an example, may be globally synchronizedusing eLORAN signals. By its design, eLORAN has ability to delivertiming that is within 100 ns of UTC, and it has even been demonstratedusing measurement that the timing obtained from eLORAN may have betteraccuracy than 50 ns. Each LDACS ground station shown at 1160 in FIG. 101may be equipped with the dual mode receiver. A LDACS ground station 1160may receive signals from several eLORAN stations indicated at 1162. TheLDACS ground station controller (GCS) 1164 knows its own location and byprocessing received eLORAN signals, the LDACS ground station 1160 maysynchronize its internal clocks. Previous LDACS trials from DLR hadrequired precise synchronization of LDACS stations at better than 20 ns.Such tight synchronization was necessary since actual LDACS waveformswere used for ranging. However, in this example of the enhanced LDACSsystem, the aircraft 1166 does not use the LDACS waveform fortriangulation, and therefore, the synchronization does not have to be astight as in the DLR trials.

A-PNT Solution Based on the Enhanced LDACS System and eLORAN

In these positioning systems, the ground station layout needs to achievefavorable Horizontal Dilution of Precision (HDOP) values over the areawhere the enhanced LDACS system provides alternative positioning,navigation and timing services. The enhanced LDACS system addresses theLDACS ground synchronization and the aircraft positioning algorithm bycombining LDACS communication capabilities with the A-PNT support fromeLORAN.

Referring again to FIG. 101, the hybrid GPS/eLORAN receiver formed bythe combination 1142, 1144 that may be used in the enhanced LDACS system1140 is illustrated. The hybrid GPS/eLORAN receiver 1142, 1144 uses GPSor other GNSS service when these services are available. However, whenthere is a GNSS outage, the decision algorithm module detects the outageand starts using the eLORAN system for position, navigation and timing(PNT).

At the “Resilient PNT output” 1114 shown in FIG. 101, the receiver 1142,1144 provides PNT in the same format whether the PNT is obtained usingGNSS or eLORAN. The most significant challenge for the enhanced LDACSsystem 1140 shown in FIG. 101 is the accuracy of eLORAN's portion of thereceiver. The eLORAN positioning calculation is based on the propagationdelays from fixed locations of eLORAN ground stations to the receiver.The eLORAN radio signals propagate in the vicinity of the ground andthrough Earth's atmosphere. As a result, its propagation speeds are notequal to the speed of light in vacuum. The differences are small butsignificant enough to make eLORAN less accurate than GNSS. Thepropagation speed of eLORAN signals depends on atmospheric conditions,which are subject to constant weather-based fluctuations.

To compensate for the changes in the atmosphere and the resultingchanges in the radio signal, eLORAN systems use Additional SecondaryFactors (ASF) maps, which are created for each eLORAN site. ASF maps areobtained through extensive calibrations of the site to compensate forvariable propagation speed. When ASF maps are used, the eLORAN systemmeets RNP 0.3 navigation requirements corresponding to calculatingposition to within a circle with a radius of 0.3 nautical miles (NM). Anaccuracy better than 8 meters has even been observed.

An aircraft station may perform its position estimation using the dualmode receiver 1142, 1144 (FIG. 101). In the absence of GPS, the locationestimation may be done using an eLORAN based Alternate Positioning,Navigation and Timing of the enhanced LDACS system. To achieve therequired accuracy, the aircraft station 1166 will require theappropriate ASF maps, which may be delivered to the aircraft station viathe enhanced LDACS system as shown in FIG. 102.

As shown in the example of FIG. 102, a flying aircraft station 1166 iswithin the coverage area of two eLORAN stations 1162 indicated as eLORAN1 and eLORAN 2 and three LDACS sites 1160 indicated as LDACS1, LDACS2and LDACS3. Using signals that it receives from eLORAN sites, theaircraft station 1166 may determine its location. The accuracy of thislocation determination, however, is dependent on the accuracy of the ASFmaps that are available to the receiver at the aircraft station 1166. Aset of accurate maps may be provided to the receiver via the broadcastchannels of neighboring LDACS ground stations 1160. These stations 1166are in the relative vicinity of the aircraft station and they are at afixed location.

The distances between the LDACS ground stations 1160 and eLORAN sites1162 are constant and known. Therefore, LDACS ground stations 1160 maydetermine ASF maps that are valid in their vicinity. Along itsgeographical location, each LDACS ground station 1160 may broadcast theASF maps that are valid for its coverage area. The aircraft station 1166may then combine these maps and use them to improve location accuracy.In the example shown in FIG. 102, the aircraft 1166 receives fourdifferent maps: 1) M11-ASF map for eLORAN 1 in the coverage area ofLDACS1; 2) M21-ASF map for eLORAN 1 in the coverage area of LDACS2; 3)M22-ASF map for eLORAN 2 in the coverage area of LDACS2; and 4) M32-ASFmap for eLORAN 2 in the coverage area of LDACS3. Knowing its approximatelocation relative to LDACS and eLORAN, the aircraft 1166 may use an ASFmap to refine its location estimate. Because this estimate is based onalmost real time calibrated ASF maps, the accuracy will be comparablewith GNSS.

The enhanced LDACS system coupled with eLORAN is advantageous and usesthe dual mode GNSS/eLORAN receiver shown in FIG. 101, which is used onboth the LDACS ground station and on the aircraft station. In thepresence of GNSS, this dual mode receiver uses satellite positioning,but in the absence of GNSS, the dual mode receiver uses eLORAN basedpositioning.

LDACS ground stations use the dual mode receiver to synchronize theirtransmission. The synchronization, however, comes from LDACS standard.The synchronization is not required for A-PNT because the LDACS waveformis not used for ranging. The LDACS ground stations use their knowledgeof the locations for eLORAN stations and their own geo-coordinates toestimate up-to-date ASF for their coverage area. These maps aretransmitted on the LDACS broadcast channel. The maps are received by theflying aircraft station, which receives multiple eLORAN signals, e.g.,at least two, and multiple ASF maps, e.g., at least one per eLORAN site.eLORAN signals are used for location estimation and the maps are used toachieve higher location accuracy. The location estimate is communicatedback to the Air Traffic Control via an ADS-B message carried over theenhanced LDACS system.

The enhanced LDACS system with eLORAN has several advantages. eLORAN iswidely recognized as an A-PNT system and is a high power system that isdifficult to jam. It is a high availability system and with the previousLORAN-C, is a proven and reliable positioning technology that has beenused for navigation since 1957.

The enhanced LDACS system with eLORAN capability provides forsynchronization of LDACS, avoids an LDACS specific ranging algorithm,and solves the communication bottleneck of eLORAN's data channel byemploying the broadband LDACS communication capabilities. LDACS stationsare used for real time calibration of eLORAN radio signal propagationand development of ASF maps and as a result, the maps become locationspecific and more accurate. This approach supports ADS-B and isindependent of the LDACS network layout. As long as the aircraftreceives 2 (or more) eLORAN signals and as long as it receives an ASFmap for each eLORAN signal, an accurate positioning is possible. Even ifthe aircraft does not receive ASF maps, which may happen if there are noLDACS ground stations in view, historical ASF maps or the maps broadcaston the eLORAN data channel may be used.

Referring now to FIG. 103, there is illustrated an enhanced LDACS systemgenerally at 1170 having an Alternate Positioning, Navigation and Timing(A-PNT) capability and showing four LDACS ground stations 1172 andaircraft 1174. A messaging overview includes a ground station siteinformation message, such as an SIB (System Information Block) inaddition to the base enhanced LDACS system 1170. This ground stationsite information includes the ground station transmit power (EiRP) andthe ground station latitude and longitude for the antenna location. Thesite information message may include the antenna height in the ASL andGSL, and the antenna bore sight for the direction and tilt angle. Themessage may include antenna parameters, such as the gain profile and thehorizontal/vertical 3 dB beamwidth and similar factors. Additional SIBmessages may be broadcast by each LDACS ground station.

The enhanced LDACS system may provide for multilateral RF path-losscalculation with confidence. For example, there may be a RF path-lossbasis for location estimate. There is a direct relationship betweenpath-loss and distance and time. Reference is made to FIG. 104 showing apropagation time and path-loss in the signal between a transmitterantenna 1180 and receiver antenna 1182. In air-to-ground applications,the RF path-loss is predictable in free space. The antenna pattern maybe known such as the directional gain and the lobe shape. Because ofinsight into the transmitted signal characteristics and the antennapattern in its orientation, the received signal characteristics may beused to derive a location area estimate. Multiple location areaestimates may be based on signals for multiple transmitters and usedsuch that a probable location can be derived. The location as derivedmay not be suitable for navigation, but may be used as verification fora primary position determination with an additive confidence factor andpotentially suitable for a location determination in lieu of otherpositioning information.

The aircraft station acquires the signal from local serving groundstation operating as a communications node. Based on the measured roundtrip time, the ground station provides timing advance (TA) plus theenhanced TA to the aircraft station. Using the TA/eTA, the aircraftstation calculates the range to the serving ground station. There is anarc of possible locations to be determined from the ground station.

For each neighbor, it is possible to use supplied neighbor parameters,and the aircraft station synchronizes to a neighboring ground stationand calculates a timing offset referenced to the serving ground stationtiming. A range to the neighboring ground station is derived from themeasured timing offset. The measured time offset as a derived range, theTA/eTA derived range, and the supplied ground station-to-neighbordistance values are used to calculate an improved probability oflocation in three-dimensional space. This probability of location iscalculated for each aircraft station, the serving ground station, andneighboring ground station triplet, which are used together to derive animproved accuracy and resolution position estimation for the aircraftstation.

The triangulated location probability provides a level of integrityself-checking. Bounds may be applied to the calculated location andallow for detection of error conditions for that triplet. For example,the calculated location may indicate the altitude beyond a reasonableboundary, and the calculated location estimate may be geographicallydifficult. This may increase resistance to bogus ground station signals,including ionosphere bounce and similar factors.

The triangulated location probability provides a level of integrityself-checking where bounds may be applied to the calculated locationsurface and allow for detection of error conditions for that triplet.Examples may include the calculated location estimate and the indicatedaltitude beyond a reasonable boundary, and a calculated locationestimate.

The path-loss may be calculated and may correspond to the transmittedsignal strength minus the measured received signal strength,corresponding to the total and/or pilot signal power, e.g., the RSCP,SINR and other factors. The transmit power may be the total and/or pilotsignal power and the transmitter characteristics may be advertised bythe transmitter or known via an almanac database. The FSPL formula maybe used to calculate the distance or an improved path-loss model for aspecific ATG operation. The calculated distance value may include“error” due to antenna gain pattern. The calculated ranges may be usedto multiple transmitters and may be used to derive a location of thereceiver and this may result in an area of probability for the locationof the receiver.

Examples of the antenna pattern information are shown in FIGS. 105 and106, which illustrate the vertical and horizontal antenna pattern. FIG.107 shows a typical 120 degree sector antenna pattern with a 3 decibelbeamwidth.

The transmitter antenna pattern characteristics and orientation mayinclude the transmit antenna location, direction, tilt, gain, height,and the 3 decibel and 6 decibel beamwidth, e.g., both vertical andhorizontal. This may be advertised by the transmitter or known via analmanac database. The receiver antenna gain should be known for optimalcharacteristics. If the relative location of the receiver to thetransmitter is known, the antenna pattern characteristics may be used toimprove the path-loss based range estimate and the angle of the receiverrelative to the antenna gain load. This may be used effectively toverify or corroborate alternatively derived location solution for anintegrity check and confidence factor impact.

It is also possible to use a low canopy LTE-assistance that includes alow cost LDACS Alternate Positioning, Navigation and Timing nearairports to provide better coverage. For example, the local groundstation may receive local LTE Alternate Positioning, Navigation andTiming signals and transmit to the aircraft station integrity and/orcorrection information for numerous LTE stations, which broadcast usableAlternate Positioning, Navigation and Timing information that is withinrange. It is possible to transmit local barometric information toenhance vertical positioning information and this may include initialposition and timing that may be done through GPS or potentially with anetwork synchronization such as the IEEE 1588. The LTE AlternatePositioning, Navigation and Timing may be used for approaches with lowerminimums such as equivalent to the SBAS GPS approaches. This may be usedwith any form of communication that is not limited to LDACS and to anytype of aircraft such as UAS.

The ranging data, as part of the LDACS capability, is similar to the DME(Distance Measuring Equipment) and may be extracted from the LDACScommunications links between the aircraft and LDACS ground stations. Itis similar to the ILS (Instrument Landing System) with GBAS(Ground-Based Augmentation System). LDACS may provide enhanced datatransfer capacity suitable to enhance DFMC GBAS2 by providing additionalaugmentation information. The enhance LDACS system may supportcyber-security measures for GBAS, such as authentication and informationintegrity. It is possible that the enhanced LDACS system may providesecured and increased throughput capacity that paves the way for futurenavigation applications, such as curved precision approaches and 4-Dtrajectory operations.

The enhanced LDACS system may incorporate a Subscriber Identity Module(SIM) card in which data may include information of whether or not awireless communications system is usable. A network controller maycontrol operation of the SIM card. The SIM card may operate incombination with the network controller to apply or store a policy foraircraft stations as client devices based on a subscription profile andapply a data capacity policy for each aircraft station based onsubscription profile information. The SIM card may also provide anetwork security policy, including deep packet inspection and filteringfor packets from external packet data networks.

As noted before, the enhanced LDACS system may connect to the cellularsystem and include the LTE functionality and it is possible to receivetemporary identifiers to determine an authentication server andauthenticate an aircraft station. An initial connection message mayinclude the capabilities of the enhanced LDACS system and a servicedescriptor for initial connection for an aircraft station as part of theLDACS network connecting into a cellular network. This initialconnection message may include a service descriptor to determine whatnetwork components and which aircraft station it should connect. It ispossible to query different nodes to determine the best networkcomponents to which a cellular connection should be made. A cellularnode may be queried to determine what services the aircraft station mayaccess.

It is possible that the underlay and overlay networks may work inconjunction with the cellular core network. Either the overlay networkor the underlay network may determine an authorization and authenticatea point of contact and perform authentication and authorization ofdifferent aircraft stations.

It is possible for the enhanced LDACS system and an aircraft stationoperating with the enhanced LDACS system to intercept DME requests andrespond without using the DME over the air resources. It is possible forthe enhanced LDACS system to identify messages intended for an initialnavigational aid device such as a NORMARC distance measuring equipmentand identify the context of the message, such as a message destinationas part of an exclusion list of destinations that are not permitted tobe forwarded. An automated message for a request to a secondarynavigational aid device may be made with instructions to determinesimilar information as requested by the initial message. A response maybe received from a secondary navigational aid device such as a beaconand data reformatted into the originally requested format and responsemade to the message.

The enhanced LDACS system may use the OFDM spectrally efficientmodulation, but may incorporate filter bank multi-carrier (FBMC) andsimilar modulation techniques that operate with a multiple, narrow band,orthogonal, or non-orthogonal, closely spaced subcarrier signals withoverlapping spectra transmitted to carry data in parallel. Multiplesymbol mapping techniques may be used, including QPSK, QAM, 16-QAM,64-QAM, and other mapping techniques. Separated 500 KHz channels may beused to transmit and receive with frequency division duplex (FDD) or ashared channel for transmit and receive using time division duplex(TDD). An aggregated base station radio equipment may be co-located at acommon geographic location or located at geographically separated sites.A common LDACS controller may manage resources across a set ofaggregated channels as a single logical element.

Bandwidth available for user services may be expanded using an expandedcontiguous channel bandwidth in odd (3, 5, 7, etc.) multiples of thefundamental 500 KHz bandwidth channel. Bandwidth expansion may beallocated symmetrically above and below the center 500 KHz in 1 MHzincrement as 500 KHz pairs. Remote nodes such as aircraft stations maybe provided with two-way communications using an enhanced LDACS systemlink relay that includes an internet protocol (IP) data connectionbetween a base station and the aircraft station. Peer-to-peer protocolsmay be used.

When a remote aircraft station requests a relay connection from anotheraircraft station, a proxy connection for the remote aircraft station maybe requested and a logical internet protocol (IP) data connection madebetween the proxy connection and the peer-to-peer connection with aremote aircraft station. A packet routing function may be provided.

The SIM card may include data to determine whether or not a wirelesscommunication is usable as noted before. A ground base station mayexecute mirror-updating and restoration of data stored in a SIM card inresponse to a request from an aircraft station. Thus data stored in anindividual SIM card may be mirror-updated. Although a SIM card isdiscussed, other memory cards may be used. The SIM card or other memorycard may include a non-volatile semiconductor memory for storing thedata and the controller may control operation of the non-volatilesemiconductor memory. The controller may include an ID control storageunit that is coupled to an external power supply terminal supplied withan external power supply voltage and read interface terminal used whenan ID number is read from an outside. It may individually operate withthe power supply voltage via the external power supply terminal to allowthe ID number in the memory card to be read via the raid interfaceterminal. A power supply circuit may monitor the power supply voltagesupplied to the controller and decouple a powerline for the power supplyvoltage when it is not supplied.

The enhanced LDACS network may include a base station or othercontroller that provides air traffic control voice and related data,weather data, guidance and navigation data, entertainment data, andsimilar data. The encryption keys of the memory card may vary over theduration of the session or vary with the exchange of traffic, such asbased on a predefined algorithm. Any session or temporary security keysmay be derived based on the encryption keys of the memory card bygenerating session or temporary security keys and key validation numbersusing one or more algorithms at the aircraft station and part of theenhanced LDACS system. A seed value may be provided by the enhancedLDACS system from fixed or dynamic network parameters transmitted by thebase station or aircraft stations of the enhanced LDACS system. Theencryption information may include the encryption key and/or encryptioncertificate. A third-party certificate authority may be used with apublic key infrastructure having two asymmetric keys as a public andprivate key where the keys expire after a validity. A symmetric sessionkey may be optionally generated.

The enhanced LDACS system may also work with the ADS-B system. Theenhanced LDACS system may receive signals from at least threetransmitters that use different protocols, including but not limited to,GNSS, LTE, UMTS, and other protocols. Measurements may be made duringperiods as specified by the enhanced LDACS network on a single receiverchain or multiple receiver chains with geolocation measurements usingdifferent geolocation techniques, such as the observed time differenceof arrival (OTDOA). Geolocation data and identifier information may bebroadcast to other aircraft stations from ground stations or repeater orpeer-to-peer aircraft stations at regular or irregular intervals asdetermined from the enhanced LDACS system network configuration.Different information elements as part of the geolocation data andidentifier information may include an unencrypted temporary identifier,unencrypted location information with an accuracy of X labeled as“course,” an unencrypted location information with an accuracy of Ylabeled as “precise,” and a value of integrity. A public encryption keyand private encryption key may be distributed by a key server withasymmetric encryption key pairs updated via the network at a specifiedtime.

There may be state machine updates with frequency scanning where theLDACS controller or aircraft stations may store frequencies withpotential enhanced LDACS system signals along with associated signalstrength measurements or metadata taken during measurement periods.There may be an ability to remove frequencies and associated metadataafter unsuccessfully attempting to decode an enhanced LDACScommunications signal on that frequency a number of times as specifiedby the enhanced LDACS system. There may be an accelerated link recoveryby transitioning to a directed decode state, in which network signalsmay be decoded on specified frequencies, after determining that theforward link is unacceptably poor when the number of stored frequenciesis greater than zero. A directed decode state may be transitioned afterthe expiration of the link timers when the number of stored frequenciesis greater than zero.

An RSSI scan may be performed to find frequencies to scan and a nextcandidate carrier may be tuned and the LDACS ground station signaldetected with frequency and metadata stored if there is success. If anyLDACS ground stations have been located, a carrier frequency search listmay be conducted.

Timers may be involved, including a paging timer. Synchronizationsignals may be used that include one or more periodic fixed subframelocations within a multi-frame as defined by the enhanced LDACS system.Potential subframe locations may include broadcast frames, commoncontrol frames, or data frames. A synchronization signal may be decodedin time windows within a multi-frame, including one or more periodicfixed subframe locations as defined by the enhanced LDACS system. Thesubframe locations of a synchronization signal may be reconfigured bythe enhanced LDACS system at the start of each multi-frame.

A beacon may be used to create awareness of the enhanced LDACS systempeer-to-peer capable radios where beacon transmit opportunities andperiodicities are configurable by the enhanced LDACS system and beacontransceivers may use a listen before transmit procedure to reducecollisions. Relay support and location support may be included. It ispossible that connected peers in a peer-to-peer network may create apeer tunnel to exchange information between those aircraft stations andother network entities that do not share a direct connection. Selectedinformation elements may be broadcast to the peer connected enhancedLDACS system to maintain geolocation information, including associatedmetadata, such as heading and speed.

For clarity of explanation, a number of aspects of the system and methodembodiments fully described above, are presented in a more simplifiedform in the following descriptive paragraphs and shown in the associateddrawings. As will be appreciated by those skilled in the art, thevarious aspects described may be used independently or combined with oneor more other aspects.

Throughout the description, it should be understood that LDACS groundstations may be located anywhere on the Earth's ground, which includeshigh altitude mountains, ground level sites, valleys and bodies of watersuch as rivers, lakes and the ocean. The LDACS ground stations may beportable and located on vehicles, including ships on water and in themiddle of the ocean. The LDACS ground stations could be located onemergency vehicles for first responder use. In a working example, theLDACS ground stations could be portable ground stations that form theoverlay network described above wherein corresponding ones of LDACSground stations, whether mobile or fixed, have a lower transmissionpower. Mobile LDACS stations referred to as LDACS ground stations couldbe moved into a smaller geographical area on emergency or other portablevehicles and operate as smaller communication cells for the LDACSoverlay network. A ship at sea can have an LDACS ground station thatcorresponds to a much larger geographical area, such as for an underlaynetwork, while several ships at sea in an emergency rescue operationcould operate as lower power LDACS stations for the overlay network.

Referring now to FIG. 108, an enhanced L-band Digital AeronauticalCommunications System (LDACS) is generally shown at 1200 and includes aplurality of LDACS ground stations 1204, assigned to respectivedifferent ground communication networks shown as ground communicationnetwork number 1 that is associated with LDACS ground station number 1.A number of ground stations 1204 are illustrated as LDACS ground stationnumber 1 and LDACS ground station “n” and “n+l” communicating withrespective ground communication networks 1 and “n” and “n+1.” Of course,multiple ground stations may be assigned to a given ground communicationnetwork as will be appreciated by those skilled in the art. It will alsobe appreciated that where cellular telephone networks are used, thesemay also be part of different roaming agreements.

A plurality of LDACS airborne stations 1208 are configured tocommunicate with selected ones of the LDACS ground stations 1204 basedupon respective roaming agreements for the different groundcommunication networks. In this example, a number of airborne stations1208 are shown and numbered one, two, and “n” indicative that a largenumber of airborne stations could be present. The enhanced LDACS system1200 includes a network broker 1220 having a processor 1224 and memory1228 that stores roaming agreements. The processor 1224 is configured toauthorize a connection between an LDACS airborne station 1208 and anLDACS ground station 1204 based upon a corresponding roaming agreement.

Each LDACS ground station 1204 includes a ground RF transceiver 1232 andground controller 1236, and configured to transmit corresponding groundnetwork identification data. Alternatively or additionally, each LDACSground station 1204 may be configured to transmit corresponding groundnetwork operation parameter data.

The network broker 1220 may be configured to track costs associated withthe connection between the LDACS airborne station 1208 and the LDACSground station 1204. The network broker 1220 is configured to provide acorresponding level of service, from among a plurality of differentlevels of service, based upon the corresponding roaming agreement. Insome embodiment, the connection between the LDACS airborne station 1208and LDACS ground station 1204 may be configured to provide a base levelof service irrespective of the corresponding roaming agreement.

Each of the LDACS ground stations 1204 includes a ground antenna 1240and its ground radio frequency (RF) transceiver 1232 coupled to theground antenna, and its ground controller 1236 coupled to the ground RFtransceiver. Further, each of the LDACS airborne stations 1208 includesan airborne antenna 1250, an airborne radio frequency (RF) transceiver1254 coupled to the airborne antenna, and an airborne controller 1258 iscoupled to the airborne RF transceiver.

The plurality of LDACS ground stations 1204 and LDACS airborne stations1208 may be configured to operate within at least one 500 kHz channel ina frequency range of between 964-1156 MHz, for example. The networkbroker 1220 may be formed as a Cloud-based network broker and it may beformed as a distributed network broker, for example.

At least one of the LDACS airborne stations 1208 may be an unmannedLDACS airborne station illustrated generally at 1210. The network broker1220 includes its processor 1224 and associated memory 1228 that isconfigured to authorize a connection between an LDACS airborne station1208 and an LDACS ground station 1204 based upon a corresponding roamingagreement.

Referring now to FIG. 109, an enhanced L-band Digital AeronauticalCommunications System (LDACS) is generally shown at 1300 and includesplurality of LDACS ground stations 1304 and a plurality of LDACSairborne stations 1308, each configured to communicate with the LDACSground stations at a given class of service from among a plurality ofdifferent classes of service. As illustrated, a number of LDACS groundstations 1304 are shown and numbered one, two and “n” and maycommunicate with respective ground communication networks that areassociated with respective LDACS ground stations. A number of LDACSairborne stations 1308 are shown and numbered one, two and “n”indicative that any number of airborne stations may be present. Theenhanced LDACS system 1300 includes a network controller 1320 configuredto operate the plurality of LDACS ground stations 1304 and LDACSairborne stations 1308 at the plurality the different user classes ofservice. One of skill in the art will also appreciate that a givenairborne station and/or ground station may communicate on multipleclasses of service either simultaneously or sequentially.

The network controller 1320 is configured to reassign at least onechannel to maintain a given user class of service during flight. Thenetwork controller 1320 is also configured to maintain different userclasses of service to provide priority communication to a higher userclass, and to preempt communication to a lower user class when resourcesare limited. For example, the plurality of different user classes ofservice may include at least two of an emergency user class of service,a military user class of service, a commercial user class of service,and a civil user class of service. Other exemplary classes of serviceinclude air traffic control, air traffic control audio, and aircraftoperations. In some embodiments, each LDACS airborne station 1308prioritizes onboard data communications services. The onboard datacommunications services includes at least two of cockpit voice data,pilot data link communications data, A-PNT data, ADS-B data, passengerdata, telemetry data, and operational data.

Each of the plurality of LDACS ground stations 1304 includes a groundantenna 1324, a ground radio frequency (RF) transceiver 1328 coupled tothe ground antenna, and a ground controller 1332 coupled to the groundRF transceiver. Each of the plurality of LDACS airborne stations 1308includes an airborne antenna 1340, an airborne radio frequency (RF)transceiver 1344 coupled to the airborne antenna, and an airbornecontroller 1348 coupled to the airborne RF transceiver 1344.

The plurality of LDACS ground stations 1304 and LDACS airborne stations1308 are configured to operate within at least one 500 kHz channel in afrequency range of between 964-1156 MHz. In some embodiments, thenetwork controller 1320 is formed as a Cloud-based network controllerand in another embodiment, the network controller is formed adistributed network controller. In addition, at least one of the LDACSairborne stations 1308 includes an unmanned LDACS airborne stationindicated generally at 1310. The network controller includes a processor1360 and an associated memory 1364, which stores the different classesof services.

Referring now to FIG. 110, an enhanced L-band Digital AeronauticalCommunications System (LDACS) is generally shown at 1400 and includes aplurality of LDACS ground stations 1404, and a plurality of LDACSairborne stations 1408 each configured to communicate with the LDACSground stations.

The enhanced LDACS system 1400 includes a network controller 1420configured to operate a given LDACS ground station 1404 and LDACSairborne station 1408 to use a primary LDACS channel and at least onesupplemental LDACS channel defining an aggregated bandwidth channel,with the primary LDACS channel changing at handover from one LDACSground station to another LDACS ground station. LDACS ground stations1404 are numbered 1, 2 . . . n corresponding to the plurality that canbe contained in the LDACS 1400, and LDACS airborne stations 1408 arenumbered 1, 2, . . . n indicative that any number can be employed.

The network controller 1420 is configured to dynamically add or subtractsupplemental LDACS channels. The network controller 1420 is alsoconfigured to add successive supplemental LDACS channels alternatinglyabove and below the primary LDACS channel. One of skill in the art willappreciate that the added (or subtracted) supplemental channels need notbe contiguous with the primary channel or other supplemental channels.

Each LDACS airborne station 1408 may include a spectrum analyzer 1424 orsimilar device that is configured to collect spectral data and transmitthe spectral data to a respective LDACS ground station 1404. The networkcontroller 1420 may assign the at least one supplemental channel basedupon the spectral data.

The network controller 1420 is configured to assign different airbornecommunications functions to different supplemental LDACS channels. Thenetwork controller 1420 is also configured to assign the at least onesupplemental LDACS channel for a ground-to-air direction and/or for anair-to-ground direction.

In one embodiment, the network controller 1420 may be formed as aCloud-based network controller, and, in another embodiment, the networkcontroller may be formed as a distributed network controller. Thenetwork controller 1420 may assign the at least one supplemental LDACSchannel based on at least one of a number of flying aircraft, flyingroutes of each aircraft, type and passenger capacity for each aircraft,historical data on communication needs for each aircraft, weatherpatterns, and changes of flying routes due to changes in weatherpatterns.

At least one of the LDACS airborne stations 1408 may include an unmannedLDACS airborne station indicated generally at 1410. The networkcontroller includes a processor 1450 and associated memory 1454 thatstores data related to aircraft, communication needs for each aircraft,weather patterns and other related data. Each of the plurality of LDACSground stations 1404 includes a ground antenna 1460, a ground radiofrequency (RF) transceiver 1464 coupled to the ground antenna, and aground controller 1468 coupled to the ground RF transceiver. Each of theplurality of LDACS airborne stations 1408 includes an airborne antenna1470, an airborne RF transceiver 1474 coupled to the airborne antenna,and an airborne controller 1478 coupled to the airborne RF transceiver.One of the LDACS airborne stations 1408 may be an unmanned LDACSairborne station indicated generally at 1410.

Referring now to FIG. 111, an enhanced L-band Digital AeronauticalCommunications System (LDACS) is generally shown at 1500 and includes aplurality of LDACS ground stations 1504, and a plurality of LDACSairborne stations 1508 configured to communicate with the LDACS groundstations. As illustrated, a number of LDACS ground stations 1504 areillustrated and numbered one, two and “n” and communicate withrespective ground communication networks that may be associated withrespective LDACS ground stations. A number of LDACS airborne stations1508 are shown and numbered one, two and “n,” indicative that any numberof airborne stations may be present.

The enhanced LDACS 1500 includes a Cloud-based network controller 1520configured to allocate LDACS resources to the plurality of LDACS groundstations 1504 and the plurality of LDACS airborne stations 1508 basedupon a number of LDACS airborne stations, respective flight paths ofeach LDACS airborne station, a respective type of each LDACS airbornestation, and historical data on communication use for each LDACSairborne station. The Cloud-based network controller 1520 is configuredto allocate LDACS resources based on weather patterns, changing weathercausing flight path changes, in a form of LDACS channels, and based oncost, for example. The Cloud-based network controller 1520 may allocateLDACS resources based upon different Service Level Agreements (SLAs) andbased upon different user classes of service.

Each of the plurality of LDACS ground stations 1504 includes a groundantenna 1540, a ground radio frequency (RF) transceiver 1544 coupled tothe ground antenna, and a ground controller 1548 coupled to the groundRF transceiver. Similarly, each of the plurality of LDACS airbornestations 1508 includes an airborne antenna 1550, an airborne radiofrequency (RF) transceiver 1554 coupled to the airborne antenna, and anairborne controller 1558 coupled to the airborne RF transceiver.

The plurality of LDACS ground stations 1504 and LDACS airborne stations1508 operate within at least one 500 kHz channel in a frequency range ofbetween 964-1156 MHz. In addition, at least one of the LDACS airbornestations 1508 includes an unmanned LDACS airborne station indicatedgenerally at 1510. The Cloud-based network controller 1520 includes aprocesser 1560 and associated memory 1564 that stores data related tothe allocated LDACS resources.

Referring now to FIG. 112, an enhanced L-band Digital AeronauticalCommunications System (LDACS) is generally shown at 1600 and includes aplurality of cellular telephone ground stations 1604, and a plurality ofLDACS ground stations 1608. The enhanced LDACS 1600 includes a pluralityof LDACS airborne stations 1612, each configured to selectivelycommunicate with either a corresponding LDACS ground station 1604 or acorresponding cellular telephone ground station 1608 based upon analtitude of the LDACS airborne station. The altitude may be determinedby any of a number of different approaches. For example, the altitudecan be determined by an airborne sensor, prior survey data, receivedsignal strength, a position determining sensor referenced to a servicearea volume database, etc. Of course, other parameters may also beconsidered along with altitude to determine switching between networks.

As illustrated, a number of LDACS ground stations 1608 are illustratedand numbered one, two and three and communicate with respective groundcommunication networks that may be associated with respective LDACSground stations or with cellular networks the plurality of cellularground stations numbered in this example as ground stations one, two andthree. A number of LDACS airborne stations 1612 are shown and numberedone, two and “n” indicative that any number of airborne stations may bepresent. One of skill in the art will also appreciate that the roamingaspects discussed herein are also applicable to these embodiments.

Each LDACS airborne station 1612 includes a cellular telephonetransceiver 1620, an LDACS transceiver 1624, and a controller 1628 toswitch between the cellular telephone transceiver and the LDACStransceiver. The controller 1628 may be configured to switch using amake-before-break handover. The cellular telephone transceiver 1620 maybe formed as an LTE transceiver in an example.

Each LDACS airborne station 1612 includes a satellite transceiver 1640.The controller 1628 is configured to switch to the satellite transceiver1640 instead of the cellular telephone transceiver 1620 when coveragewith the corresponding cellular telephone ground station 1604 isunavailable.

The LDACS airborne station 1612 includes an altitude sensor 1650 coupledto the controller 1628. The LDACS airborne station 1612 includes a firstantenna 1654 coupled to the cellular telephone transceiver 1620, asecond antenna 1658 coupled to the LDACS transceiver 1624, and a thirdantenna 1658 or other receiving device coupled to the satellitetransceiver 1640.

Each of the plurality of LDACS ground stations 1608 includes a groundantenna 1670, a ground radio frequency (RF) transceiver 1674 coupled tothe ground antenna, and a ground controller 1678 coupled to the groundRF transceiver. The plurality of LDACS ground stations 1608 and LDACSairborne stations 1612 are configured to operate within at least one 500kHz channel in a frequency range of between 964-1156 MHz. At least oneof the plurality of LDACS airborne stations 1612 includes an unmannedairborne station indicated generally at 1682.

Referring now to FIG. 113, an enhanced L-band Digital AeronauticalCommunications System (LDACS) is generally shown at 1700 and includes aplurality of LDACS ground stations 1704, and a plurality of LDACSairborne stations 1708 configured to communicate with the plurality ofLDACS ground stations. Each LDACS airborne station 1708 may beconfigured to collect respective routing metrics, and each LDACSairborne station may be selectively operable as at least one of a hostand client. As will be appreciated by those skilled in the art, routingmetrics may be based on relative positions of the airborne stations 1708and ground stations 1704, available channels, etc. The enhanced LDACS1700 includes a peer-to-peer server 1712 that establishes a mesh networktopology shown generally at 1716 from the plurality of LDACS airbornestations 1708 based upon the routing metrics, and selectively operateeach LDACS airborne station as at least one of the host and client. Thepeer-to-peer server 1712 may be provided by a mesh controller on one ormore the airborne stations in some embodiments. As illustrated, a numberof LDACS ground stations 1704 are illustrated and numbered one, two and“n.” A number of airborne stations 1708 are illustrated and numberedone, two and “n” indicative that any number of airborne stations may bepresent.

The plurality of LDACS airborne stations 1708 may restrict communicationbased upon data service level. At least one LDACS ground station 1704may serve as a gateway for a terrestrial communication networkillustrated generally at 1720. Each LDACS airborne station 1708 mayinclude internal communications network 1724 such as an airborne WiFinetwork coupled to the mesh network topology 1716.

The plurality of LDACS airborne stations 1708 may be configured tocommunicate with one another via time division duplex and in at leastone LDACS channel. The LDCAS airborne stations 1708 may also communicatein an available Distance Measuring Equipment (DME) frequency band. Theplurality of LDACS airborne stations 1708 may be configured tocommunicate at least one of A-PNT data, ATC data, and voice data. Insome embodiments, one or more links to a satellite communicationsnetwork may also be used in the LDACS mesh network as will be understoodby those skilled in the art.

Each LDACS ground station 1704 includes a ground antenna 1728, a groundradio frequency (RF) transceiver 1732 coupled to the ground antenna, anda ground controller 1736 coupled to the ground RF transceiver.Similarly, each LDACS airborne station 1708 includes an airborne antenna1750, an airborne radio frequency (RF) transceiver 1754 coupled to theairborne antenna, and an airborne controller 1758 coupled to theairborne RF transceiver. The plurality of LDACS ground stations 1704 andLDACS airborne stations 1708 are configured to operate within at leastone 500 kHz channel in a frequency range of between 964-1156 MHz. Thepeer-to-peer server 1712 includes a processor 1770 and an associatedmemory 1774.

Referring now to FIG. 114, an Automatic Dependent Surveillance-Broadcast(ADS-B) device is illustrated generally at 1800 that is positioned in anaircraft shown at 1802. The ADS-B device 1800 includes a controller 1804and a radio frequency (RF) transmitter 1808 coupled thereto andconfigured to transmit flight identification data, and transmit flightposition data at a coarse accuracy and a fine accuracy. The RFtransmitter 1808 operates in this example at a frequency within theL-band Digital Aeronautical Communications System (LDACS) frequencyband. The controller 1804 is configured to encapsulate the flightidentification data and flight position data within a message for anLDACS. The ADS-B device 1800 may include an internal positiondetermining device, or may be coupled to another device for positiondata.

The controller 1804 may encrypt the flight position data at the fineaccuracy and encrypt the flight identification data. The controller 1804may encrypt the flight position data at the fine accuracy and notencrypt the flight position data at the coarse accuracy. In someembodiments, the coarse position data may be generated in the controller1804 by adding a position offset to the true position data, and theposition offset may be generated by an algorithm that varies the offsetover time, for example. The controller 1804 may assign temporary flightidentification data, for example, and not encrypt the flight positiondata at the coarse accuracy.

The ADS-B device 1800 includes an RF receiver 1820 to receive flightidentification data and flight position data from at least one otheraircraft illustrated generally at 1824. In these embodiments, thecontroller 1804 may relay the flight identification data and flightposition data from the at least one other aircraft 1824.

Referring now to FIG. 115, an enhanced L-band Digital AeronauticalCommunications System (LDACS) is illustrated generally at 1900 andincludes a plurality of LDACS ground stations 1904, a plurality ofAlternate Positioning, Navigation and Timing (A-PNT) beacon transmitterspositioned on the ground, and indicated generally at 1908, and aplurality of LDACS airborne stations indicated generally at 1912. TheLDACS airborne stations 1912 communicate with the LDACS ground stations1904, and determine A-PNT information based upon the plurality of A-PNTbeacon transmitters 1908.

Each LDACS airborne station includes a satellite position determiningdevice 1916 such as a GPS device. However, the A-PNT information mayserve as an alternate to the satellite position determining device 1916.

Each A-PNT beacon transmitter 1908 may be used exclusively for A-PNT,for example, as shown by the A-PNT beacon transmitter block function at1910, and each LDACS airborne station 1912 may use the A-PNT informationas support for navigation. The A-PNT information may also be used for anAutomatic Dependent Surveillance-Broadcast (ADS-B) output, and/or as atiming reference. In an example, each A-PNT beacon transmitter 1908includes a LORAN beacon transmitter 1920, for example. In anotherexample, each A-PNT beacon transmitter 1924 in an example may be acellular telephone base station 1928. The cellular base station 1928 maybe an LTE base station so that the LTE pilot signals serve as the beaconsignals as will be understood by those skilled in the art.

Each LDACS ground station 1904 may transmit a respective position andeach LDACS airborne station 1912 further determine A-PNT informationbased upon the positions received from the plurality of LDACS groundstations. Each of the LDACS ground stations 1904 includes a groundantenna 1930, a ground radio frequency (RF) transceiver 1934 coupled tothe ground antenna, and a ground controller 1938 coupled to the groundRF transceiver. Similarly, each of the LDACS airborne stations 1912includes an airborne antenna 1942, an airborne radio frequency (RF)transceiver 1946 coupled to the airborne antenna, and an airbornecontroller 1950 coupled to the airborne RF transceiver.

The LDACS ground stations 1904 and LDACS airborne stations 1912 areconfigured to operate within at least one 500 kHz channel in a frequencyrange of between about 964-1156 MHz. In addition, at least one of theLDACS airborne stations 1912 includes an unmanned LDACS airborne stationindicated generally at 1914.

An LDACS airborne station 1912 for the enhanced LDACS 1900 includesradio frequency (RF) circuitry 1960 configured to communicate with theplurality of LDACS ground stations 1904 and receive transmissions fromthe plurality of A-PNT beacon transmitters 1908. The controller 1950 iscoupled to the RF circuitry 1960 and configured to communicate with theLDACS ground stations 1904, and determine A-PNT information based uponthe transmissions from the plurality of A-PNT beacon transmitters 1908.

Referring now to FIG. 116, an enhanced L-band Digital AeronauticalCommunications System (LDACS) is illustrated generally at 2000 andincludes a plurality of LDACS ground stations 2004, and a plurality ofLDACS airborne stations 2008. Each LDACS airborne station 2008communicates with the plurality of LDACS ground stations 2004 using atleast one cellular network security feature. In an example, the at leastone cellular network security feature is a Long-Term Evolution (LTE)security feature. The cellular network security features may be one ormore of the following: a) authentication of an LDACS airborne station2008 with a corresponding LDACS ground station 2004; b) integrityprotection using an integrity checksum; c) encryption of LDACS data; d)using a non-access stratum layer; and e) using an LDACS Data Link Layer.

Each of the plurality of LDACS ground stations 2004 includes a groundantenna 2012, a ground radio frequency (RF) transceiver 2016 coupled tothe ground antenna, and a ground controller 2020 coupled to the groundRF transceiver. A number of ground stations 2004 are illustrated asground stations 1, 2, 3 and “n” corresponding to the different number ofground communication cells or networks. Similarly, each of the LDACSairborne stations 2008 includes an airborne antenna 2024, an airborneradio frequency (RF) transceiver 2028 coupled to the airborne antenna,and an airborne controller 2032 coupled to the airborne RF transceiver.A number of airborne stations 2008 are shown and numbered 1, 2 and “n”indicative that any number of airborne stations may be used.

The LDACS ground stations 2004 and LDACS airborne stations 2008 operatewithin at least one 500 kHz channel in a frequency range of between964-1156 MHz. In addition, at least one of the LDACS airborne stations2008 includes an unmanned LDACS airborne station indicated generally at2010.

Referring now to FIG. 117, an enhanced L-band Digital AeronauticalCommunications System (LDACS) is illustrated generally at 2100 andincludes a plurality of LDACS ground stations 2104, and a plurality ofLDACS airborne stations 2108 configured to communicate with the LDACSground stations. The enhanced LDACS 2100 includes a network controller2112 that operates the plurality of LDACS ground stations 2104 and LDACSairborne stations 2108 at different transmission powers to define anLDACS underlay network illustrated generally at 2120 and an LDACSoverlay network illustrated generally at 2124. In this example, theLDACS underlay network 2120 has a larger cell size than the LDACSoverlay network 2124.

For example, the LDACS underlay network 2120 includes corresponding onesof the LDACS ground stations 2104 having a higher transmission power,and the LDACS overlay network 2124 includes corresponding other ones ofthe LDACS ground stations having a lower transmission power. The networkcontroller 2112 assigns LDACS frequency channels within the LDACSoverlay network 2124 and the LDACS underlay network 2120.

Each of the LDACS ground stations 2104 includes a ground antenna 2130, aground radio frequency (RF) transceiver 2134 coupled to the groundantenna, and a ground controller 2138 coupled to the ground RFtransceiver. The LDACS ground stations 2104 are numbered 1, 2 and 3 withthe first ground station operating at the higher transmission power forthe underlay network 2120 and ground stations 2 and 3 operating at lowertransmission power for the overlay network 2124. Each of the LDACSairborne stations 2108 includes an airborne antenna 2150, an airborneradio frequency (RF) transceiver 2154 coupled to the airborne antenna,and an airborne controller 2158 coupled to the airborne RF transceiver.In the underlay network 2120, LDACS airborne stations numbers 1, 2-“n”are illustrated and may be operating at higher altitudes over a largegeographic area, while the overlay network 2124 includes a mannedairborne station 2108 and an unmanned airborne station 2110 operating atlower altitudes and in communication with the lower power LDACS groundstations 2 and 3 as illustrated. Of course, the different transmissionpowers may be provided by one or more of different transmitter outputpowers, different antenna gain patterns, and different heights andpointing direction of the antennas, for example.

The plurality of LDACS ground stations 2104 and LDACS airborne stations2108 are configured to operate within at least one 500 kHz channel in afrequency range of between 964-1156 MHz. The network controller 2112includes a processor 2120 and associated memory 2124, in an example, isthe network a Cloud-based network controller, and in another example,the network controller is a distributed network controller. In addition,at least one of the plurality of LDACS airborne stations includes anunmanned LDACS airborne station 2110, which in this example is operatingwith the LDACS overlay network 2124 since the unmanned airborne stationmay be a drone for delivering packages or similar function and operatecloser to the ground.

This application is related to copending patent applications entitled,“ENHANCED LDACS SYSTEM HAVING ROAMING AGREEMENTS AND ASSOCIATEDMETHODS,” “ENHANCED LDACS SYSTEM HAVING CHANNEL AGGREGATION ANDASSOCIATED METHODS,” “ENHANCED LDACS SYSTEM HAVING CLOUD-BASEDMANAGEMENT AND ASSOCIATED METHODS,” “ENHANCED LDACS SYSTEM COMBINED WITHCELLULAR TELEPHONE GROUND STATIONS AND ASSOCIATED METHODS,” “ENHANCEDLDACS SYSTEM HAVING MESH NETWORK TOPOLOGY AND ASSOCIATED METHODS,”“AUTOMATIC DEPENDENT SURVEILLANCE-BROADCAST (ADS-B) DEVICE HAVING COARSEAND FINE ACCURACY FLIGHT POSITION DATA AND ASSOCIATED METHODS,”“ENHANCED LDACS SYSTEM THAT DETERMINES A-PNT INFORMATION AND ASSOCIATEDMETHODS,” “ENHANCED LDACS SYSTEM HAVING LTE SECURITY FEATURES ANDASSOCIATED METHODS,” “ENHANCED LDACS SYSTEM HAVING LDACS UNDERLAY ANDOVERLAY NETWORKS AND ASSOCIATED METHODS,” which are filed on the samedate and by the same assignee and inventors, the disclosures which arehereby incorporated by reference.

Many modifications and other embodiments of the invention will come tothe mind of one skilled in the art having the benefit of the teachingspresented in the foregoing descriptions and the associated drawings.Therefore, it is to be understood that the invention is not to belimited to the specific embodiments disclosed, and that themodifications and embodiments are intended to be included within thescope of the dependent claims.

That which is claimed is:
 1. An enhanced L-band Digital AeronauticalCommunications System (LDACS) comprising: a plurality of LDACS groundstations; a plurality of LDACS airborne stations, each configured tocommunicate with the LDACS ground stations at a given class of servicefrom among a plurality of different classes of service; and a networkcontroller configured to operate the plurality of LDACS ground stationsand LDACS airborne stations at the plurality the different user classesof service.
 2. The enhanced LDACS of claim 1, wherein the networkcontroller is configured to reassign at least one channel to maintain agiven user class of service during flight.
 3. The enhanced LDACS ofclaim 1, wherein the network controller is configured to maintaindifferent user classes of service to provide priority communication to ahigher user class and to preempt communication to a lower user classwhen resources are limited.
 4. The enhanced LDACS of claim 1, whereinthe plurality of different user classes of service comprises at leasttwo of an emergency user class of service, a military user class ofservice, a commercial user class of service, and a civil user class ofservice.
 5. The enhanced LDACS of claim 1, wherein each LDACS airbornestation is configured to prioritize onboard data communicationsservices.
 6. The enhanced LDACS of claim 5, wherein the onboard datacommunications services comprise at least two of cockpit voice data,pilot data link communications data, A-PNT data, ADS-B data, passengerdata, telemetry data, and operational data.
 7. The enhanced LDACS ofclaim 1, wherein each of the plurality of LDACS ground stationscomprises: a ground antenna; a ground radio frequency (RF) transceivercoupled to the ground antenna; and a ground controller coupled to theground RF transceiver.
 8. The enhanced LDACS of claim 1, wherein each ofthe plurality of LDACS airborne stations comprises: an airborne antenna;an airborne radio frequency (RF) transceiver coupled to the airborneantenna; and an airborne controller coupled to the airborne RFtransceiver.
 9. The enhanced LDACS of claim 1, wherein the plurality ofLDACS ground stations and LDACS airborne stations are configured tooperate within at least one 500 kHz channel in a frequency range ofbetween 964-1156 MHz.
 10. The enhanced LDACS of claim 1, wherein thenetwork controller comprises a Cloud-based network controller.
 11. Theenhanced LDACS of claim 1, wherein the network controller comprises adistributed network controller.
 12. The enhanced LDACS of claim 1,wherein at least one of the LDACS airborne stations comprises anunmanned LDACS airborne station.
 13. A network controller for anenhanced L-band Digital Aeronautical Communications System (LDACS)comprising a plurality of LDACS ground stations; and a plurality ofLDACS airborne stations, each configured to communicate with the LDACSground stations at a given class of service from among a plurality ofdifferent classes of service, the network controller comprising: aprocessor and an associated memory configured to operate the pluralityof LDACS ground stations and LDACS airborne stations at the pluralitythe different user classes of service.
 14. The network controller ofclaim 13, wherein the processor and associated memory are configured toreassign at least one channel to maintain a given user class of serviceduring flight.
 15. The network controller of claim 13, wherein theprocessor and associated memory are configured to maintain differentuser classes of service to provide priority communication to a higheruser class and to preempt communication to a lower user class whenresources are limited.
 16. The network controller of claim 13, whereinthe plurality of different user classes of service comprises at leasttwo of an emergency user class of service, a military user class ofservice, a commercial user class of service, and a civil user class ofservice.
 17. The network controller of claim 13, wherein the processorand associated memory are configured to operate the plurality of LDACSground stations and LDACS airborne stations within at least one 500 kHzchannel in a frequency range of between 964-1156 MHz.
 18. The networkcontroller of claim 13, wherein the processor and associated memory areCloud-based.
 19. A method operating an enhanced L-band DigitalAeronautical Communications System (LDACS) comprising a plurality ofLDACS ground stations; and a plurality of LDACS airborne stations, eachconfigured to communicate with the LDACS ground stations at a givenclass of service from among a plurality of different classes of service,the method comprising: operating a network controller to operate theplurality of LDACS ground stations and LDACS airborne stations at theplurality the different user classes of service.
 20. The method of claim19, comprising operating the network controller to reassign at least onechannel to maintain a given user class of service during flight.
 21. Themethod of claim 19, comprising operating the network controller tomaintain different user classes of service to provide prioritycommunication to a higher user class and to preempt communication to alower user class when resources are limited.
 22. The method of claim 19,wherein the plurality of different user classes of service comprises atleast two of an emergency user class of service, a military user classof service, a commercial user class of service, and a civil user classof service.
 23. The method of claim 19, comprising operating each LDACSairborne station to prioritize onboard data communications services. 24.The method of claim 23, wherein the onboard data communications servicescomprise at least two of cockpit voice data, pilot data linkcommunications data, A-PNT data, ADS-B data, passenger data, telemetrydata, and operational data.